



^^ - 




, "'"•Mos^^' i- 



.^^^ 









o 





V 






G 



-^ V 






^-^ 



A > 







' .0- 






o 




. ^^^ "^^ <^ 



WORDS FOE THE HOUR. 



BY 

THE AUTHOR OF " PASSION-FLOWEES." 

LL'^^-^ ^h^^cL M^i-.^ 




BOSTO>^: 
TICKNOR AND FIELDS 

M DCCC LVII. 






UA 



Entered according to Act of Congress, in the year 1856, by 

TiCKNOR AND FIELDS, 

in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the District of Massachusetts. 



RIVERSIDE, Cambridge: 

STEREOTYPED AND PRINTED BT 
H. 0. HOUGHTON AND COMPANY. 



J 



CONTENTS. 



The Lyric 1 5 

The Sermon of Spring 7 

Tremont Temple 23 

Slave Eloquence 25 

An Hour in the Senate 27 

The Senator's Eeturn 30 

Slave Suicide 32 

Balaklav A 35 

To Florence Nightingale 38 

Florence Nightingale and her Praisers 40 

Furthermore 43 

Privation 45 

On receiving a Volume after the Death of the Author 49 

Via Felice 52 

Dilexit Multum 57 

The Park 59 

Fanny Kemble's Child 63 

The Smooth Portrait 69 

The Eough Sketch 71 

Mystic — not Mysterious 73 

Maud 75 

Love ua Exile 80 



IV CONTENTS. 

Morning .* 82 

What I Have 83 

What I Bear 85 

Sue 88 

S. P 91 

Widow's Words 94 

The Nursery 96 

A Letter 99 

The Poet's Wish 101 

Entsagen 102 

The Beautiful 104 

Where is the Beautiful 108 

As IT Seems Ill 

As IT Is 113 

A Vision of Montgomery Place 115 

From the Lattice 119 

A Maid's Requisition 121 

In the Vineyard 122 

The Wolf within the Mother's Sheepfold 124 

The Lamb Without 126 

The Shadow that is Born with Us 129 

A Man's Story 132 

The Light Fallen 135 

The Two Stars 136 

A Word with the Brownings 139 

One Word more with E. B. B 145 

Dante 148 

Moonlight 150 

The Prisoner of Hope 152 

High Art 154 

Prelude 159 

Ade 164 



THE LYRIC L 

Have pity on the lyric I, 
The poet's eye that finely rolls, 
And holds convertible domain 
From burning Cancer to the poles. 

Not of itself th' incendiant spark 

That sets men's thoughts to smoke and blaze ; 

It is a spirit fire-glass, 

That kindles with concentred rays. 

It hath a weary work to do, 
Fifth of all sounds that sing or sigh. 
Third of the great things I O U, 
It speeds, the monographic I. 

• Its pain and evil I have seen 
Where heart and manhood withering lie. 
And said : " Good friend, you cannot heal. 
Till you consent to lose this I." 

Empiric if our notions be. 
Or with Hegelian learning wise, 
Or set on simplest common sense. 
There is a difference in our I — s. 



THE LYRIC I. 

The philosophic I, is not 
The I that any man may meet 
On errands of familiar use, 
Or held to greetings in the street. 

The I that cannot choose but stand 
Great rights and wrongings to assert, 
Is not the I that wastes the meal, 
And leaves hiatus in the shirt. 

* * * 
Nor must the sorrows of my song 
Stand for the household weights I bear, 
Who thankful every morn return 
To tasks beloved of thought and prayer. 

Nor such as share my working sphere, 
Plagued with my music to the soul, 
For Giant foes that shut the world 
With false and tyrannous control. 

Eyes may be sad at prison bars 
To whom the sun is glad and free ; 
And placid depths of Being show 
The storm-clouds of Humanity. 

And as one emblematic cup 

From lip to lip doth fervent move, 

So make my poet vase a boon 

For all who weep, and think, and love. 



POEMS. 



THE SERMON OF SPRING. 

I. 

Now that the Spring ushers smiling the full, glad 

Summer, 
As the bride-maiden the bride, to grow modest beside 

her, 
" Here is my sister," she saith, " but more fashioned 

and perfect, 
Come to a fuller growth in the heart of the Highest, 
She the decision, I the intent of His kindness — 
Her receive, O ye mortals, for good and fruition. 
And as my blushes are lost in the glow of her beauty. 
So let your pleasures give place to the earnest of 

Wisdom. 

a) 



O THE SERMON OF SPRING. 

Wisdom, the true joy extatic, made good through 

upholding 
The burthen of noontide, with multiform splendors 

o'ercharging 
Man's weak brain, which resists them and therefore is 

manly. 
Ye who walk happy to-day, who unclasp the light 

vesture, 
That to the heart the warm sunshine may do its glad 

mission, 
That through the breast may strike rapturous joy and 

expansion, 
Ye will have sighs to give forth ere the mantle fold 

closer ; 
Ye must be sadder and wiser ere Summer shall leave 

you." 
What should the Summer prove, what the brunt and 

the bearing. 
When the fair Spring-tide doth leave us a sting in her 

blossoms ? 
What shall the action be, what the striving and 

tearing. 
When the great heart of a Nation, in wildest com- 
motion 
Shakes with its terrible heaving the green earth 

beneath us ? 



\ THE SERMON OF SPRING. 9 



eart like a woman's, (the heart is the woman in all 

things,) 
hat, through false guidance betrayed from its own 

nobler instincts, 
akes yet to consciousness, learning too late the foul 

treason, 
(J'ies thence for succor, if there be justice in 

heaven. 
\ihat are these passions, the fiendish, that rush into 

transport ? 
\4iat are these voices, the earnest, that rise to rebuke 

1 them ? 
"Wlat is this anguish? the poor heart grows passive 

1 and breathless, 
Tiiitened with terror lest they, the malignant, should 

1 conquer, 
Lifiig its hope to the Godhead that, brooding above 

us. 
Say of the Chaos, this too is my righteous appoint- 
ing. 
Yes, but the Chaos knew the command of its 

master, 
SleeM its black roughness, and sank at his feet like a 

watch-dog. 
'T w^ but the threshold I kept of thine uncounted 

treasures ; 



10 THE SERMON OF SPRING. 

Take them unwasted, Master, bring out their far 
beauties ; 

Fling to the wondering deep the new sun and tie 
planets, 

Build in the infinite largeness the heavens that skll 
praise Thee. 

Oh ! had it risen instead with a purpose persistent ; 

Said : I am somewhat, and that which I am I contime. 

Why should I yield my tumultuous joy of rebellion, 

That thy law should remodel my ancient dominion ; 

That thy will, which I care not to know, be acom- 
plished ? 

With what a smile had the lips which I dare not 
imagine 

Struck the rude outlaw to mute and immediate hoiage ! 

How had the outstretched finger vouchsafed itscalm 
guidance, 

Till the dark pulses should leap to the thriU o His 
music ! 

So, from the wilder tumult these symbols would jicture, 

Let the torn heart of my country turn, silent an( stead- 
fast. 

Seized with the courage of good, till the up^ar re- 
ceding 

Be as the thoughts of a child, who, admorbhed at 
bedtime. 



THE SERMON OF SPRING. 11 

" Thou hast been froward," creeps nearer the breast of 

his mother, 
Strangely recalling the passionate cries of the morning. 



II. 

Who are these that sweep on to the House of the 

People, 
Cherished like song-birds, warm with their owrf downy 

wrappings ? 
Splendors of feathers we see, as of laces and diamonds ; 
Splendors of beauty, that shame the adornment of 

either. 
Met by the Marshal, and led to the smile of the 

Magnate 
Bland in his greeting — ^blandly they please him with 

curtseys. 
Fairest of women tender white hands for his touching ; 
Men of the haughtiest wait for the nod of their patron. 
Has he betrayed the trust that was left to his swear- 
ing? 
Hush ! 't is the Chair Presidential to which we do 

homage ; 
Every man cringes where any man may aspire. 
One I discovered, haply not seen by my fellows ; 
Young and a Virgin, wearing her fillet of oak-leaves, 



12 THE SERMON OF SPRING. 

Wearing the green nodding plumes of the Court of the 
Prairie, 

Gyves on her free-born hmbs, on her fair arms shackles, 

Blood on her garments, terror and grief in her features. 

Oh! she was weary, upholding the crown of her 
promise. 

Keeping the watch and the ward that brave men should 
have kept her. 

Oh ! sBe was weary with crying aloud from the West- 
land, 

Faintly and fiercely : " Brothers ! will none of you help 
me?" 

Where with hum and confusion scarce tempered by 

music, 
The brilliant assemblage thronged their chief man for 

his virtue. 
Sudden she stood, like a guilty ghost at a banquet. 
" I am Kansas," she shrieked, and her hand gave its 

menace, 
"Kansas," and seized the crisp locks for a terrible 

shaking. 
" Me dost thou murder — me dost thou sell in thy 

shambles. 
Coined from my blood is the gold that should keep thee 

in power. 



THE SERMON OP SPRING. 13 

Thou hast heard my loud shrieking — ^hast counted my 

struggles ; 
Scarcely I hold from my heart the death wound of thy 

Bravos. 
Tremble," she cried, " tho' the battle seem thine for a 

season, 
Not a drop of my blood shall be wanting to judge 

thee — 
Tremble, thou fallen from mercy, ere fallen from office ; 
The heart of the Nations shall loathe ere it gladly 

forget thee. 
Known for thy vileness alone, and the sorrow it wrought 

us." 

While she yet spake, from the heaven God's thunder 

had fall'n ; 
And I heard : " The crime, not the paltry offender so 

stirs us." 

m. 

Take heart, thou lone one — a, champion leaps to defend 
thee, 

Armed with the loftier issue, the art and the moral ; 

Eloquent lips, and the integral heart of Conviction, 

Powerful still, wheu the arm of the spoiler has crum- 
bled. 



14 THE SERMON OF SPRING. 

Doctrine of Right, and the Old World tradition of 

Freedom — 
Doctrine of Justice, thank God, no New England 

invention ; 
Known to the Ancients, known to the Gods and their 

poets. 
Known to great Tully, whose pillars of perfect marble 
Stand in the temple of Truth, his remembrance for 

Ages. 
There shall thy record be, Knight of the wronged and 

the helpless ; 
There shall thy weapon be kept, with the motto : " I 

hurled it." 
How hast thou hardened the loving heart and quick 

feelings, 
To stand up and speak the great spirit-dividing sen- 
tence. 
To stand, a mark for the thief and assassin to aim at. 
More than our envy, more than thy hope was thy 

guerdon — 
Setting the seal of thy blood to the word of thy courage. 
If but the pure of heart in a pure cause should suffer, 
Sumner, the task thou hast chosen was thine for its 

fitness. 
Never was Paschal victim more stainlessly offered. 
Never on milder brow gleamed the crown of the martyr. 



THE SERMON OF SPRING. 15 

Stand thence, a mark for the better and nobler am- 
bition ; 

For they are holy, the wounds that the Southerner dealt 
thee. 

Count them blessed, and blessed the mother that bore 
thee. 

Would that the thing I best love, aye, the son of my 
bosom, 

Suffering beside thee, had shared the high deed and its 
glory. 

Shall we bend over those wounds with our tears and 
our balsams ? 

Tears warm with rapture, balsams of costliest clear- 
ness. 

Take thy deserving then — wear it for life on thy fore- 
head; 

Crowned with those scars shalt thou enter the just 
man's heaven ; 

Crowned with those scars shalt thou stand in the record 
of heroes. 

If earthly counsel were vain, should the heavens 

befriend thee. 
Sinking Orion, cast out in the wrath of the tyrant, 
Calls not in vain on the dumb heart of Nature to help 

him ; 



16 THE SERMON OF SPRING. 

Lo ! the deep comes to his aid, and its monsters upbear 
him ; 

Hesper stoops over the Ocean her long shining tresses 

Till he is drawn by them up to the zone of her beauty ; 

And, like fair sisters, the stars close around him for- 
ever. 

IV. 

Scarcely the hush of horror gives way thro' the country, 

Ere from the Westland breaks the wild war-cry that 
grieves us. 

Here the oppressor has come, he has reaped his rude 
harvest. 

And the black ridges are left in the desolate cornfield. 

Low lies the village ; the people stand, dull and dis- 
heartened. 

Wondering what miscreant shall march with the banner 
of Freedom. 

Oh ! thou blue banner of God, with the stars of thy 
promise, 

Wave in thy fury, avenge this usurping and insult ! 

Crack ! thou crystal ! let flame from the high empyrean, 

Sweep from the outraged earth the vile chief and his 
legions. 

Lawrence is fallen ! Our friends and our brothers are 
murdered ! 



THE SERMON OF SPRING. 17 

And your smug President soothly subscribes their death 
warrant. 

Man ! walk not forth, lest the beasts of the meadow 
upbraid thee — 

True to their office, fulfilling the task God appointed. 

Even the mastiff shall greet thee with howls of deri- 
sion — 

He who, left with the treasure, forsakes not its 
keeping — 

Mocking the thief, giving battle till one of them perish. 

Yea ! let the meanest thing that is faithful deride him ; 

Let stocks and stones thank God that they cannot do 
treason. 

Set him aside, my country ! be great and impeach him ! 

Write out his dark account, tell his deeds as he did 
them. 

Chosen to serve the people, his servants shall bind 
them. 

Sworn to uphold the law, he will cheat and degrade it. 

Blood has he counselled — not once but again and often. 

Blood shall he have, poured to God with a holy inten- 
tion — 

True blood of Seventy-Six, that brave men have 

bequeathed us — 
J Left to be spent as they spent it, freely for Freedom. 
2 



18 THE SERMON OF SPRING. 

Hark ! E'en the pulpit rebukes the slow drowse of the 

anthem, 
Praising of God, amid actions that praise him in nowise. 
Here some brave priest lifts his voice ; the far rapine 

and bloodshed, 
And murderous manners at home, move his eloquent 

finger. 
" Shame on you Christians," he cries, " if with such 

you have friendship. 
And, if you be not ashamed, let your Pastor disown 

you." 

Thanks! good pastor, our tribute of thanks for thy 

fervor — 
'Tis but a spark — let it kindle the wide congregation 
With that clear redness of shame w^hich hath grace 

before Heaven, 
"With that good tingling that rouses men's slumbering 

virtue ; 
Each confessing to each, we were careless and brutish ; 
Sat unawakened by, while they hewed down our 

brethren. 
Thus, by the sorrowing face shall the heart be made 

better. 
This is as things should be — let the priest lead the 

people, 



THE SERMON OF SPRINO. 19 

Stamp them, as melted wax, with high feeling and 

purpose. 
"Who hath anointed the man who shall stand looking 

Godward, 
That he should pipe to the tune of their wanton 

wishes ? 
Oh ! what a heathen Church shall we have if men's 

passions, 
Traffic and greed, are to measure the text for the 

preacher. 

V. 

Finite is human help — many words are a hindrance. 
Words for the muses should bear the slow pressure of 

patience ; 
Scarcely one leaves them content, after utmost 

endeavor. 
Visit me not with your anger, ye powers poetic. 
If, in my hotness and haste, I have jarred your sweet 

fetters. 
But, while your presence I feel, thrilling through and 

above me, 

\ Listen a moment longer ; suspend your high sentence, 
, (Towards which I leap, when the daring is more than 

the danger,) 
While with the name that has grown to a presence 

ideal, 



20 THE SERMON OF SPRING. 

As with a sound of sweet music, I pass from your 

hearing. 
Washington ! thou art set as a symbol of greatness, 
Of courage that boasts not, of honor that knows not 

temptation. 
Thee all men praise — ^not a town in thy multiplied 

country 
That hath not thy name and thy bust for its empty 

Valhalla. 
How is it with thee, calm looking down from the death- 
cloud ? 
Is not thy soul astound with the praise and the practice? 
Dost thou not point to the niches, the wreaths, and the 

statues. 
Asking : " What is it ye honor, who know not my 

maxims ? 
Mocking my spirit, when patriots catch its far echoes. 
Wherefore these splendors ? — the skill of the draftsman 

and sculptor — 
Marbles, whose whiteness stands not for your whiteness 

of virtue, 
Filth of the market defiling the innermost temple — 
Wherefore these columns ? — this dome that shall pierce 

the high heaven ? 
Were not the narrow walls wide enough for your 

mercies ? 



THE SERMON OP SPRING. 21 

Was not the low roof too high for your poor aspira- 
tions ? 

Can you not see that the heart of your city is 
meanness ? 

Give it another name, lest it stand to defame me." 



VI. 

No, not Washington, springtide must end my brief 

lesson. 
Sweetness of Nature alone for these woes can console 

us. 
Blessed is he who takes comfort in seed-time and 

harvest. 
Setting the warfare of life to the hymn of the seasons. 
In the garden, the whispering walls are our refuge, 
Closes with music its gate on the outer confusion. 
The heaped green grasses rise up in their congregation 
Lifting their heads to answer the sunshine with 

gladness. 
Birdlings singing aloft in the blossom-hung branches. 
Tell of the promise in which they bring up their young 

households. 
Tell of the faith in which God has deserted them never. 
So— we will hft our heads — these men too are our 

brothers — 



22 THE SERMON OP SPRING. 

They should be gathered with us in the fold of the 

Future. 
Heaven enlighten their hearts, ere we close for the 

death-tug, 
Flinging them far from our bounds with their wrath 

and their rapine, — 
As the man tears from his side the beloved who betrays 

him, 
Lest her soft vices insensibly ruin his virtue. 
Lest he too fall, undermined by the white tooth of 

falsehood. 
Keep the promise of Spring, O ! thou Father of 

fathers — 
Give us, great God, beyond these anarchic convulsions, 
The high, synthetic repose of thy progress and order. 



TREMONT TEMPLE. 

Two figures fill this temple to my sight, 

Who e'er shall speak, their forms behind him stand ; 

One has the beauty of our Northern blood, 

And wields Jove's thunder in his lifted hand. 

The other wears the solemn hue of night 
Drawn darker in the blazonry of pain, 
Blotting the gaslight's mimic day, he slings 
A dangerous weapon too, a broken chain. 

Oh ! what a thing it was to sit and hear 
Our Sumner pour the torrent of his soul ; 
The broken thread and parcel of the crowd 
Knit to one web — one passion-colored whole. 

We chid the tedious clock that told the knell 
Of minutes, swollen to hours, that break and die ; 
" It is not so — Time listening waits for him — 
Be still ! " we said, and passed its record by. 



24 ^ TREMONT TEMPLE. 

The evil thing he smote at, waited long 
To hurl its vileness at that Master brain. 
'T will be a proud day when we gather here, 
(Grant it, dear God !) to hear his voice again. 

And, Douglass, thou shalt own the white man's debt 
To thee and thine, half cancelled, by the rood ; 
The country flashes with the Northern fire, 
And Sumner blest the banner with his blood. 



-SLAVE ELOQUENCE. 

Why sliouldst thou speak ? stand, and Kft up thy hands, 
That bear, before high heaven, a nation's crime. 
That touch with fire th' electric chain of truth, 
Left darkly rusting in our careless Time. 

Stand, with the burthen of thine ancient lot 
Poising thy pliant figure, with a smile 
That hath a dark and bitter memory in't 
Of suffering unavenged — woe worth the while ! 

Stand, like the prophet's Christ, so grief-possest 
That silence shall afflict us more than sound ; 
Express in marble passion, motionless, 
The anguish of the fratricidal wound. 

Thy cause needs no appealing — wrongs like thine 
Nature makes dumb with greatness — do they crave 
The lowliness of Pity ? from all hearts 
Thou hast it with this thought : here was a Slave. 



26 SLAVE ELOQUENCE. 

Nay, speak, thou shadowy Image ! thou art fain 
To ease the throbbing fuhiess of thy heart. 
From lips that, not ungraciously, essay 
The white man's language, not the white man's art. 

Thou wilt not stoop to curses impotent 
And wild^such weakness is not for the free — 
With modest gesture and with manly phrase 
Make clear thy right — adorn thy liberty ! 

Nor turn to tear thy tyrants — thou hast learned 
A lesson holier than wrath or hate ; 
Since the borne sorrow leaves a bosom-rift 
Where gentle Charity may penetrate. 

Thy speech doth to the stronger race aver 

Some deathless favors — Shakspeare's thought and 

rhyme. 
The knitted bond and logic of the law, 
And Jesu's words, the treasure of all time. 

Speaking, he kept the measure of our wish, 
But we had deemed him eloquent, unheard, 
For, looking on the wronged and rescued man, 
His presence pleaded stronger than his word. 



AN HOUR IN THE SENATE. 

Falls there no lightning from yon distant heaven 
To crush this man's potential impudence ? 
Shall not its outraged patience thunder : " Hence ! 
Forsake the shrine where Liberty was given ! " 

Shall he stand here, with this defiant face, 
And clench the fist, and shake the matted hair, 
As if his brutal prowess centred there. 
Mocking at Justice, in her holy place ? 

See where he smiles ! the sophism falls so pat ! 
Suits better with his ends than finer stuff — 
Goes furthest, with the speech assured and rough — 
Is false as Hell's deceit — well — what of that ? 

" The strong shall rule, the arm of force have §way, 
The helpless multitude in bonds abide — " 
Again the chuckle, and the shake of pride — 
" God's for the stronger — so great Captains say." 



28 AN HOUR IN THE SENATE. 

Beyond the narrow freehold of our sight 
Methinks, God smiles upon a different wise, 
And to the agonizing thought replies : 
" Be of good courage — God is for the right." 

Rings the wild menace thro' the Congress Halls 
To die out harmless — hath an error friends ? 
Nay, hirelings, who protect it for their ends ; 
And fly to shelter, when its falseness falls. 

Yet, rise to answer, chafing in thy chair, 
With soul indignant stirred, and flushing brow. 
Thou art God's candidate — speak soothly now. 
Let every word anticipate a prayer. 

Gather in thine the outstretched hands that strive 
To help thy pleading, agonized and dumb ; 
Bear up the hearts whose silent sorrows come 
For utterance, to the voice that thou canst give. 

Theirs is an eloquence that cannot reach 

The coldness of our distant sympathies, 

Then, pluck them bleeding for the country's eyes, 

Speed with the wings of universal speech. 



AN HOUR IN THE SENATE. 29 

Give us their story in untutored phrase — 

The idly-learned of the earth are here, 

To hide with Reason what the heart makes clear, 

While Truth stands stript, to meet th' Eternal's gaze. 

And let the scoffer's feeble shaft be spent — 
Such shall stand silent in the better day. 
As faithless Sarah stole her shame away, 
When the stern guest rebuked her merriment. 

So the true word corrects the stormy school. 
God's angel, stooping, rests his ruffled wings — 
For this is one of many questionings. 
And one has spoken well — The right shall rule. 



THE SENATOR'S RETURN. 

How shall we greet thee when thy task is o'er, 
Thy martyr task of weariness and pain, 
When eyes that wept thy suffering, stark and sore, 
Shall see thee, stately and erect again. 

There should go forth, to crown thy lordly way, 
Glad youths and maidens, and the elders sage, 
While garlands green and milk-white robes recall 
The peaceful triumphs of the Golden Age. 

We shall be touched with heavenly Charity, 
And walk as Brothers, reconciled and glad. 
Yielding a mournful pity to the wretch. 
Whose weapon gave the bloody accolade. 

With something of the dear and tender joy 
With which we think to greet our own above. 
The pain and sharpness of the struggle o'er. 
And every vexing doubt resolved in Love ; 



THE senator's RETURN. 31 

Shall we behold thee, scatheless of the Grave, 
But with the halo of the Just in sight ; 
Bearing a rescued Goddess in thine arms, 
Thyself immortal, wed with deathless Right. 



SLAVE SUICIDE. 

Should one led up to death, or fearing worse, 
Those tortures that make dying a release, 
Anticipate the final boon of peace 
By taking on himself the murderer's curse ? 

If with unwavering purpose arm'd, his hand 
Could let the doomed captive from his breast, 
And with one purple pang reconquer rest, 
Were it not Roman, Brutus-worthy, grand ? 

No ! by my faith in God, I would not spare 
My flesh one blow prophetically due. 
Nor snatch a respite, nor for mercy sue. 
Lest I should wrong th' Omnipotence of prayer 

Lest I should rob my soul of high repose 
Earned by such racking labor of the frame, 
Or spare a miscreant heart the bootless shame 
With which men see a victim's eyehds close. 



SLAVE SUICIDE. 33 

Pursue, to depths of agony unknown — 

Strip, smite him, gyved and bound, that cannot flee, 

At one sure limit God doth set him free, 

And aimless Fury mars a form of stone. 

Had this thy creed been sanctioned, we had lost 
Those men and women patient unto death, 
Twined in our very rosary of Faith, 
God's jewels, God's, who registers their cost. 

Triumphant, these abode the test of fire, 
Were scourged, were branded, broken on the wheel, 
Pierced with sharp fangs of beasts, or sharper steel, 
And fainted not in hope, nor in desire. 

Nay, thou hadst rifled thus, with hand profane, 
A crowning glory from the Crucified ; 
Where were the healing from the wounded side, 
If his own hand the costly life had ta'en ? 

He bore his martyrdom as God did mete, 
Bequeathed it, drop by drop, and part by part, 
Ours, with the blissful brokenness of heart 
In which we kneel to kiss the sinless feet. 
3 



34 SLAVE SUICIDE. 

Smile then upon the scourge, devoted friend ! 
There comes a glory, wreathed with every stripe, 
His meed who waits till his reward is ripe, 
And crowns God's perfect purpose in his end. 



BALAKLAVA. 

They gave the fatal order, Charge ! 
And so, the light Brigade went down, 
Where bristling brows of cannon crown 
The front of either marge. 

Traced all in fire we saw our way, 
And the black goal of Death beyond — 
It was no moment to despond. 
To question, or to pray. 

Firm in the saddle, stout of heart, 
With plume and sabre waving high. 
With gathering stride and onward cry, 
The band was swift to start. 

They took the field with solemn eye. 
However wild the deed they knew, 
However whoso bade, should rue. 
Their business was, to die. 



36 BALAKLAYA. 

'T was the old gallant English blood, 
And many a shadowy ancestor, 
Guarding his sculptured arms afar, 
That day in memory stood. 

At serried gallop on they press, 
Swerveless as pencilled lines of light. 
And where a steed turns back in fright, 
That steed is riderless. 

They charged in high, immortal ire ! 
The war-cloud swallowed them, the young, 
The brave, — a handful widely flung, 
But of heroic fire. 

They fell, unconquered, nor in vain. 
No, by the sacrificial cost 
Of Faith and Courage, never lost, 
Theirs doth the day remain. 

Reft heart of love, contain thy wound ! 
Flash, eyes ! though lips press close and pale ! 
Still, mourners ! let us hear no wail 
Above the trumpet's sound. 



BALAKLAVA. 

Nor wait the sire to weep the son 
That bore his fortune and his pride, 
Nor shall the mother's wish divide 

From these, her cherished one. 

But tearful England holds her breath. 
Listening, uncomforted, their fame. 
Who, in the greatness of her name 
Rode glorious unto death. 



37 



TO FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE. 

I AM not cold, my sister, in applause 
Of one whose presence honors Queenly guests ; 
Who wears the noblest jewel of her time, 
And leaves her race a nobler, in her name. 
I do not swell thy triumphs with a wreath. 
Because thy weight of crowns is burthensome ; 
And that which henceforth least can be thy need 
Is human praise, the cordial of weak hearts. 
But, lest my silence should dispraise myself, 
I'll help its meaning with a parable. 

A scene is present to my mind, intense 
With all the joys the lyric drama gives ; 
Its heroine, fainting 'neath her fragrant spoils, 
Deafened with plaudits, vexed to answer them, 
Since none approach the conscious gift of Art 
From whence these splendors, like a fountain, flowed, 
Implores the moment to forsake the stage 
Whose right is what she pictures, not herself. 



TO FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE. 39 

But lo ! where one of tardier impulse sits 
With other blossoms that are hers, hj right, 
And waits a vacant moment for his gift. 
She is adorned bejond her youth's desire, 
No place about her for a leaflet more ; 
So, with a sudden thought, he flings the prize 
To scatter, where the patient chorus stand, 
A wdiling back-ground to her high relief. 

Strange joy and wonder seize those weary hearts 
That do their heavy work unrecognized. 
" What, not illustrious, did you think of us, 
Mere stony echoes of your nightingale, 
And Genius, that doth call us for her use ? 
You knew us faithful in the prayer, the march, 
The funeral dirge, and crowned us ? God reward 1 ' 

Methinks, a Prima Donna of your mind, 

However earnest for her due repose. 

Would turn the eyes that con to-morrow's task 

Beyond this evening's laurels, bright'ning, back, 

And send this Praiser happy to his home 

With one approving look, whose warmth should say : 

The flowers thus sent, fell nearest to my heart." 



FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE AND HER PRAISERS. 

If you debase the sex to elevate 
One of like soul and temper with the rest, 
You do but wrong a thousand fervent hearts, 
To pay full tribute to one generous breast. 

Mercy belongs to us from ancient days — 
Yea — when the Human and Divine did part, 
God left the boon of pity to the world, 
And left it garnered in a woman's heart. 

In the old warrior times of feud and fire, 
When the fierce world in armour watched and slept, 
Maidens, high-hearted, left the sumptuous court, 
And with pure hands the sick man's pillow kept. 

In those rude ages, they were fain to shield 
Their holy virtue 'neath monastic vows, 
Now, England's daughter, without fear or blush. 
To the wide world her valiant zeal avows. 



FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE AND HER PRAISERS. 41 

Nay, frailer women, strong in love alone, 
Have followed as the blast of battle led, 
Pressing on spear and sword the ill-armed breast, 
Content to perish where their soldier bled. 

She has sprung forward, an enfranchised stream 
That runs its errand in the face of day ; 
And where new blessings mark its course benign. 
Men yield approval to th' unwonted way. 

But she had freedom — hearts akin to hers 
Are held as springs shut up, as fountains sealed, 
The weighty masonry of life must part 
Before their hidden virtue be revealed. 

Women who weave in hope the daily web, 
Who leave the deadly depths of passion pure, 
Who hold the stormy powers of will attent, 
As Heaven directs, to act, or to endure ; 

No multitude strews branches in their way, 
Not in their praise the loud arena strives, 
Still as a flameless incense rises up 
The costly patience of their offered lives. 

Such love bears not the sunlight on its breast, 
But by the devious conduit underneath. 



42 FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE AND HER PRAISERS. 

It readies you, unrecognized, unknown 
Save in the brow suffused, and dewy breath. 

Then count not the heroic heart alone 
In those whom action and result make great, 
Since the sublime of Nature's excellence 
Lies in enduring, as achieving Fate. 



FURTHERMORE. 

We, that are held of you in narrow chains, 
Sought for our beauty, thro' our folly raised 
One moment to a barren eminence, 
To drop in dreary nothingness, amazed ; 

We, dwarfed to suit the measure of your pride, 
Thwarted in all our pleasures and our powers, 
Have yet a sad, majestic recompense, 
The dignity of suffering, that is ours. 

The proudest of you lives not but he wrung 
A woman's unresisting form with pain, 
While the long nurture of your helpless years 
Brought back the bitter childbirth throes again. 

We wait upon your fancies, watch your will. 
Study your pleasure, oft with trembling heart, — 
Of the success and glory of your lives 
Ye think it grace to yield the meanest part. 



44 FURTHERMORE. 

Ev'n Nature, partial mother, reasons thus : 
To these the duty, and to those the right;" 
Our faithful service earns us sufferance, 
But we shaU love you in your own despite. 

To you, the thrilling meed of praise belongs, 
To us, the pamfuller desert may fall ; 
We touch the brim, where ye exhaust the bowl, 
But where ye pay your due, we yield our all. 

Honour all women — weigh with reverend hand 
The worth of those unproved, or overtried, 
And, when ye praise the perfect work of One, 
Say not, ye are shamed in her, but glorified. 



PRIVATION. 

Of all tlie workings of the Law Divine 
Privation is most wearily outworn ; 
Harder than wounds that bleed, or pangs that fear, 
Tis Life's high treason — generous Hope forsworn. 

In Want is woe, and sad vacuity, 
Tis Aspiration doubting of its crown ; 
Yet who that ever panted in th' ascent 
"Would sit to rest, or turn to cast him down ? 

To him who presses on, at each degree 
New visions rise, beyond the dim unseen ; 
Soon happier love, soon nearer hope shall come. 
And only this slow suffering lies between. 

Some men have wrung strange glory from the cloud 
That was a prison to their loneliness ; 
And, feeding other hearts with rare delight. 
Kept for themselves their hunger and distress. 



46 PRIVATION. 

The blind majestic bard, whose tearless eyes 
Were patient in the weariness of night ; 
And one, his brother in a kindred art. 
Bereft of melody, as he of light ; 

Fruition was not for them to the sense — 
The world for one, for one the swelling tone ; 
" We work — " they said, and in high toil abode, 
And : " we have wrought," they uttered, and passed on. 

My Milton ! thou whose holy heart forbore 
The doubtful rite of uncongenial shrines. 
But gave the perfect tribute of its faith. 
Before thee now the true Shekinah shines. 

Seeking a nearer moral for my song, 
I find two poets of the latter days, 
Branded by Nature with the fatal gift. 
Pilgrims from birth, but in divergent ways. 

This rode his blood's high mettle to the full. 
Goading satiety with unblest wine ; 
This to a meeker measure moved along, 
Palm-heralded, as Christ in Palestine. 



PRIVATION. 4 7 

This, like a meteor, streamed abroad in air, — 
This, like a star, abode in distant light ; 
The one scared noonday with his crimson glare. 
The other was the beacon-guide of night. 

The one with lordly gesture trod the earth. 
Gathering all pleasure, innocent or ill ; 
The other bared his reverend brow to heav'n. 
And gleaned from Nature with a sober will. 

The one awoke the echoes of the Past, 
Those sacred voices of the marble halls, 
And bade them bear a demon-strophe wild 
To mock, afar, his gray ancestral walls. 

The other was penurious of his days < 
In those fair hills, beneath that friendly heaven; 
His were the deep, synthetic harmonies, 
The joy of task and recompense God-given. 

One, in a wild convulsion ceased to be. 
And if he went to bane or bliss, none knew ; 
The other stood, serenely crowned with age, 
And steadfast passed to God, if God be true. 



48 PKIVATION. 

Oh ! at the Muse-crowned temple of the one, 
And at the other's lonely sepulchre 
Pause thou, mj soul, and ponder deeply thence 
The paths of Fate, and choosing, dare not err. 

Hast thou the high, heroic heart to walk. 
Or wait, receptive of the distant tone ! 
Or wouldst thou sit to revel, and crush out 
Lifeblood of others, mingled with thine own ? 

Wilt thou rest guardian of these simpler loves, 
Leading the dull, the passionless, the weak ? 
Or, desperate, rush to Lido's charmed shore, 
To fling wild kisses on a hireling's cheek ? 

Oh ! treasured in the hand that cannot fail 
Let thy poor life, through want and waiting lie, 
Radiant in anguish, comforted of tears. 
If the deep voice but whisper ; it is L 



OA^ RECEIVING A VOLUME PUBLISHED AFTER 
THE DEATH OF THE AUTHOR. 

Thky bring a volume, precious with tliy name 
And latest records — all that Love can save, 
While the snow falls upon the two-years' grave 
Where thy dear ashes careless lie of Fame. 

What for thy bitter loss shall make amends 
In these sad pages ? Wert thou yet on earth 
One happy hour should give us thrice their worth, 
So far the living word all else transcends. 

I did not ask such notings of thy thought ; 
Holding more dear, with Love's own jealousy, 
The vivid doctrine that thou gavedst me, 
When flashing look, and fiery gesture taught. 

Thus bring they, gathered from Samaria's well, 

A droplet that avails no thirst to slake. 

Yet men shall deem it blessed, for his sake 

Whose shadowed sunlight on the waters fall. 
4 



50 ON RECEIVING A VOLUME . 

These, thy recorded musings, wake again 
The heart's deep longing for a music gone ; 
Thy vibrant voice, whose clear attempered tone 
Was like the martyr's rapture-cry in pain. 

Shattered lies now the heav'n-strung instrument — 
Sure, Death must grow harmonious on the spot ; 
While, at the grave that holds, but has thee not, 
Sad Echo, waiting, o'er the urn is bent. 

To that far shrine, through all the Winter's woe. 
With hands enclasped, that strive to lift on liigh 
Affections born and centred humanly, 
In solemn, measured cadence would I go ; 

Making thy grave a station to mine own. 
Seeking in depths of prayer some deathless thought, 
Some jewel of the soul, divinely wrought. 
To hang where purest gems have place alone. 

But, held by ties that let me not depart 
On Grief's wild sweeping pinions any whither, 
I can but send my pilgrim wishes thither. 
Folding thy dear, dumb volume to my heart. 



AFTER THE DEATH OF THE AUTHOR. 51 

Not each for each can live, but each for other, — 
Only the dead in God are isolate ; 
He shall accord me patience for mj fate 
Whose holy rest doth gather thee, my Brother. 



VIA FELICE. 

T WAS in the Via Felice 

My friend Ms dwelling made, 

The Roman Via Felice, 

Half sunshine, half in shade. 

A marble God stands near it 
That once deserved a shrine. 

And, veteran of the old world. 
The Barberini pine. 

A very Roman is he 

Whom Age makes not so wise 
But that each coming winter 

Is still a new surprise. 

But I lodged near the Convent 
Whose bells did hallow noon, 

And all the lesser hours 
With sweet recurrent tune. 



VIA FELICE. 53 

They lent their solemn cadence 

To all the thoughtless day ; 
The heart, so oft it heard them, 

Was lifted up to pray. 

And where the lamp was lighted 

At twilight, on the wall, 
Serenely sat Madonna, 

And smiled to bless us all. 

Those voices, illustrating 

Their bargains, from the street, 

Shaming Thought's narrow meanness 
With music infinite. 

Those men of stately stature. 

Those women, fair of shape. 
That watched the chestnuts roasting. 

The fig, and clustered grape ; 

All this, my daily pleasure 

That made none poor to give. 
Was near the Via Felice 

Where Horace loved to live. 



54 VIA FELICE. 

I see him from the window 
That ne'er my heart forgets, 

He buys from yonder maiden 
My morning violets. 

Not ill he chose those flowers 
With mild, reproving eyes, 

Emblems of tender chiding. 
And love divinely wise. 

i'or his were generous learning, 
And reconciUng Art ; 

Oh ! not with fleeting presence 
My friend and I could part. 

His work of consolation 
Abode when he was gone, 

A tower of Beauty lifted 
From ruins widely strewn. 



Our own inconstant heavens 
Were o'er us, when we met 

Before a longer parting, 

Not seen, nor dreamed of, yet. 



VIA FELICE. 55 

'T was when the Spring's soft breathing 

Restores the frozen sense, 
And Patience, dull with Winter, 

Is glad in recompense. 

There, in our pleasant converse. 

As by one thought, we said : 
This is the Via Felice, 

Where friends together tread. 



Again, my friend turned seaward, 
Again, athwart the wave 

He flung the wayward fortune 
His fiery planet gave. 

And, in that heart of Paris 
That hides distress and wrong 

So cold, with show and splendor, 
So dumb, with dance and song ; 

Drawn, by some hidden current 

Of unknown agony, 
To seek a throb responsive. 

Our Horace sank to die. 



OO VIA FELICE. 

Oh ! not where he is lying 
With dear ancestral dust, 

Not where his household traces 
Grow sad and dim with rust; 

But in the Ancient City 

And from the quaint old door, 

I'm watching, at my window 
His coming, evermore. 

For Death's Eternal city 
Has yet some happy street, 

'T is in the Via Fehce 

My friend and I shall meet. 



DILEXIT MULTUM. 

Could I portray thy face, illuminate 
With the high glory that it had for me, 
Or deathless carve, in marble's sainted state, 
The record of thy vanished majesty ; 

Or could I, like the grief-inspired of old, 
Dream out some Minster of divinest form, 
Arch within arch, to cherish and enfold 
Love's passing holiness from waste or worm ; 

Or could I rear towards heav'n a life of good. 
Whose date were from our meeting, faultless, strong, 
With every thought sublimed and prayer-endued. 
The annals of my days should praise thee long. 

But gifts like these I have not, to embalm, 
Enshrine, englorify thy memory ; 
Only, from stammering lips, the fitful psalm 
Whose music wavers, when it speaks of thee. 



58 DILEXIT MULTUM. 

Yet take my offering — Nature's simple skill 
Shall stead for thee the perfect form of Art, 
And my love's record, like to Mary's, dwell 
Eich in the shattered vase and lavish heart. 



THE PARK. 

When the earliest star of evening breaks the gloom of 
twilight skies, 

And to meet its fresh effulgence, we lift up day- 
wearied eyes. 

Eyes on which Life hangs its burthen, Sleep can loose 
as well as Death, 

Then a spirit, passing near me, pauses, breathing gentle 
breath. 

Come thou where the giant shadows shall enclose thee 

with their arms, 
Where the silence shields from sinful thoughts as angels 

guard from harms ; 
Not with laughter and companions, flaunting in the light 

of Day, 
Come, a vesper Nun at even, to remember and to 

pray. 



60 THE PARK. 

Come with hands clasped full of meekness, let thy 

stately robings fall 
Till the dust of grief besmirch them, wear Love's 

cypress, bear his pall ; 
Bring thy perfumes — let them mingle with the costly 

gift of tears, 
They should solemnize a sorrow that makes poor the 

coming years. 

Here where, broidered like a blazon on the scutcheon 

of a shrine, 
Gainst the fading sky so pearly, sable shows the 

tapering pine, 
Here where dies the wind the softest, like hushed 

pinions of a dove, 
I will fold thee, oh beloved! in the fervor of my 

love. 

I will lead thee where we wandered, in the time long 

fled away. 
Thou shalt rest where we were wont to shield us from 

the summer day ; 
It was gorgeous in its beauty, but a joyaunce more 

divine 
Filled the heart of one whose fingers bore the tendril 

clasp of thine. 



THE PAKK. 61 

Leave thy tremblings, leave thy doublings, let thy sins 

stand out of sight ; 
They are quick enough to seize thee — Law and 

Conscience claim their right ; 
Rest one rnoment from the summing thy offences and 

thy meed. 
Leave the weary task to Love whose grace is wider 

than thy need. 

Gather tender thoughts about thee, gather holy hope 

and power, 
Call the names of all thy dear ones, let them keep with 

thee this hour. 
Hold the shadows of thy children in thine arms and 

on thy knee, 
With the rapture, dear and costly, that attends 

Nativity. 

Soft, the angels close around thee — so, thou walkest 

dream-pursued. 
Golden cords of help unwinding, in the circling 

solitude, 
Seest stars immortal kindling from the failing suns that 

set, 
And behevest, though thy friend is gone, his love 
surrounds thee yet. 



62 THE PARK. 

Passing hence, thou envyest nought of theirs that rule 

this fair domain, 
Since treasures that are hid to them, to thee unlock 

again ; 
Joy of dear and duteous mourning, joy of vagueness 

and of gloom, 
Joy of Friendship that deserved to leave no fellow in 

its room. 



FANNY KEMBLE'S CHILD. 

As I was fain to wile a summer's day 
With Sliakspeare's Juliet folded in my lap, 
And for her accents, strove to call up thine. 
An unexpected music to my thoughts 
Answered — the matchless laugh of Maidenhood ; 
Wliile looking from the pondered page, I saw 
Of the strange growths of Time and Nature, one. 
It had thy brow in little, and thine eyes 
But new created, ojffering gentleness ; 
Ev'n thy brown locks, with youth's half risen sun 
Still gilding them aslant. " Who should this be 
But Fanny Kemble's Daughter ? " said my heart, 
Ere others came to tell her parentage. 

Tears waited on the vision. Woful child ! 
Thy Mother scarcely knows thy countenance, 
Remodelled from its baby lineaments ; 
And I, a stranger, hold with grasp profane 
A hand, that she should almost die to touch. 
Wherefore is she thy Mother ? unto her 



64 FJLXXT kemble's child. 

Tlie Poet's word : - Bring forth male cMldren only/ 

^Mmld ?-T_ f fittest sentence. As I mused, 

Iheaid. _ r^^ r - h 7 ::-:-? -Ik. 

Tin mmc o'^^Tl .:„^-c_i ■i^—^^-t.^ u'^^i-ii. mv knee, 

Wbom with a Moiiers fc^oleiy I f(mdled, 

Galln^ tibem Pass and Pug. and ^ag, and Bear, 

Beraiii^ fl^m with mimic violence, 

And sillj bufiets, to be coaxed with kissing. 

As with a swi^ rem^lKaiioe, said the Giri, 

" Whj, that is like my Modus' ! " and grew sad. 

Oh ! manj-pssBianed Woman — fervid soul ! 
Thoo. lidi in all save Meekness — strong in all 
Save that straog Padenee which ontwearies Fate, 
And makes Gods quail before its ccMistaney. 
WUfch vas fiKgotten in thv gifts of birth? 
Of all the powers the greatest only — Love. 

Whai voice makes mosic in the diildless breast 
Whidi tfame own IMapason cannot fill ? 
Has CcnBdenee ne'er a mnal fiir the Toid ? 
Do tfaj Ibrsaken ones cry oat to thee 
For tibe teive nortore left aside <ne day 
To foDov stormy Ibeiiii^ romid the world ? 
Or gathezest tfaoa, from thine own infimcy, 
Xatore shall take tiir glorious foundlings up. 



FANNY KEMBLE's CHILD. 65 

Proving a wiser and a tenderer nurse 

Than thou, 'self-tortured, and self-comforting ? 

Oh ! wander where thou wilt, thou must return 

From the flushed conquests of a thousand fields, 

Vanquished at last of sorrow, as creeps back 

From her wild course the wounded Lioness, 

That Death may find her, crouching near her young. 

Peace wait upon thee where thou seekest it — 
At the world's altar, or the Convent gi-ate. 
But while thou walkest, Time doth follow on 
With lessons that are slow and great to learn. 
Lessons of human weakness, and life's woe ; 
The impotence of Anger, the divine 
Of Pardon, and th' unconquerable power 
Fixed in the waiting, philosophic eye. 
As Fate's kaleidoscopic angles turn 
Thou shalt behold great burthens poised and held 
Li smallest grasp, thro' Wisdom's leverage. 
Thou shalt allow what patient hearts attend 
The helpless cradle, without hope or love 
Between its narrow bounds, and God's immense. 
What painful fingers spin the duteous web 
With Uttle comfort, for the weal of such 
As give no passing smile in recompense, 
But take the garment to their frigid souls, 
5 



66 FANNY KEMBLE's CHILD. 

Saying, " it scarcely warms me." Thou shalt leai'n 
What Women, gloriified thro' tears, have gone 
Uncanonized of men, to that best heaven 
Where God consoles His martyrs. 

One who walked 
From the throne's splendor to the bloody block. 
Said: "this completes my glory," with a smile 
Which still illuminates men's thoughts of her. 
When such as we supremely love and trust 
Meet the last struggle on their outward way, 
'Tis the last look of deathless-loving eyes, 
The parting gesture of unconquered Faith, 
That o'er the bitter waters beckon us. 
Wringing fond hearts with vague imaginings, 
Making unblest the limits that forbid 
Aught save our longing souls to follow them. 

Grief hath its wanderings — pass and pardon mine. 

Thine was the lot of Woman, only thou 

Wert more than Woman in thy haughty will, 

And less than Woman, in humility. 

Battling for higher tasks, and loftier praise. 

Thy matchless office was unknown of thee. 

A helpful partner ? whence are mightiest laws 

But of opposing forces, greatly wed ? 

A nurse of Babies ? what is Nature else ? 



FANNY KEMBLe's CHILD. 67 

See, the stars nestle in the down of Night, 
And, from the calm of one wide Mother-breast 
Doth holy sleep reconsecrate the world. 



Did torture go beyond the powers of life, 

Could one not, dying, look such mild reproach 

As looks a slave in his tormentor's eyes, 

Who se6s, thro' tears and blood, God's pardon near 



,v 



The tree that sheds its blossoms ere their time, 

Bears not the Autumn glory of its fruit. 

The drop that in its cavern cannot wait 

The infiltration of a thousand years 

Shall never shine, a diamond. Earth herself, 

Hoarding rebellion, were chaotic still. 

Foiled of her beauty, joyless, purposeless. 

Oh friend ! Life is creation to the end. 

And we beget ourselves in agony 

A thousand times, to one ancestral soul. 

I cannot be thy Teacher, nor would ask 
Unwilling lips to take their text from mine. 
But wonder seizes on my thoughts, and fear, 
When, in the Drama of our destinies, 
A soul like thine is summoned to the front, 
And maddens with the passion of its part. 



68 FANNY KEMBLE's CHILD. 

• 

The gaslights flutter, and the benches whirl, 
The music sobs its insufficiency ; 
Some shout applause, some sit convulsed and still, 
While heavenly Art, with awful eyes intent. 
Waits to pronounce the sentence of the world. 



THE SMOOTH PORTRAIT. 

How lightly hast thou learned of human grief ! 
Thy flesh has 'scaped the sacrificial knife — 
Men quote the pride of a too happy life 
To set thy even virtues in relief. 

The brow's serenity — the head thrown back 
That the audacious eyes may smile to heaven ; 
The mouth, with not one tender muscle riven 
By the impatient torture of the rack ; 

A joy self-continent, that overflows 
The marble of the face, for Beauty's sake ; 
Heroic laughter, such as Day might wake 
In a God's heart, with rosy, ringing blows. 

Oh ! happy soul — upon thy placid breast 
The worn eye sinks, and has so much of calm. 
While the clear voice is medicine and balm 
To heal the aguish fever of unrest. 



70 THE SMOOTH PORTRAIT. 

Yet are there closets of the inner shrine 
Where we are bidden from the flowerj day, 
To stand and give the awful voices sway, 
And, holding by God's hand, must part- from thine. 



THE EOUGH SKETCH. 

A GREAT grieved heart, an iron will, 
As fearless blood as ever ran ; 
A form elate with nervous strength 
And fibrous vigour, — all a man. 

A gallant rein, a restless spur, 
The hand to wield a biting scourge ; 
Small patience for the tasks of Time, 
Unmeasured power to speed and urge. 

He rides the errands of the hour, 
But sends no herald on his ways ; 
The world would thank the service done, 
He cannot stay for gold or praise. 

Not lavishly he casts abroad 
The glances of an eye intense. 
And, did he smile but once a year. 
It were a Christmas recompense. 



72 TEDE EOUGH SKETCH. 

I tliank a poet for his name. 
The " Down of Darkness," this should be ; 
A child, who knows no risk it runs, 
Might stroke its roughness harmlessly. 

One helpfiil gift the Gods forgot. 
Due to the man of lion-mood ; 
A woman's soul, to match with his 
In high resolve and hardihood. 



MYSTIC— NOT MYSTERIOUS. 

!Me shalt thou quicken unto life renewed, 
Thou livincr brijrhtness. falling on dead faith : 
Scattering my patient gloom, as one returned 
From c^olden travels his jrlad lesson saith. 
And, teUing of far climes, and faery pleasures, 
Makes rich the hearer's heart with fancied treasures 

A circling star that comes with counted years. 
Bringing the heavens unnumbered to our sight. 
Startling our twihght with immortal joys 
For which we wrestle with the speU. of night. 
Fling off the measured burthen of our sleeping, 
And walk the deathless fields in angels' keeping. 

Xay, be not mortal, do not bend to me, 

Nor nod too friendly from thy shining plain ; 

I am with my own lowliness at home, 

That thou shouldst stoop to mete with it, were pain. 

So, let me hold thee in thine own belonging, 

Where reverential eyes can do no wronging. 



74 MYSTIC NOT MYSTERIOUS. 

Since last this gem was in our crystal set, 

It hath a lustre doubly great and wide ; 

As all pure essence gathers purity, 

A lesser planet is his duteous bride ; 

Ah ! does she know his glory as I breathe it, 

And cherish more — her heart should faint beneath it. 

There are who throng thy footsteps, while I sit 
Intent on oft-remembered words of thine ; 
Thou growest familiar to their careless sight, 
And yet thy presence is not theirs, but mine ; 
A boon held from me, for its very nearness — 
A joy beyond all joys, of dread and dearness. 

No more — too costly is my love for thee 
To sow in words that other hearts may reap. 
Love shall be pardoned if he husband love. 
Hoarding the inward sweetness he would keep 
To feed the hunger of unlightened hours — 
Who misses it ? the bee's theft from the flowers. 

No more — a music long forborne came near 
To wake the frost-bound pulses of delight ; 
And thy pale brow, and weirdly golden locks 
Passed as a glorious warning of the night. 
Keep my vows, Spirit, in thy distant heaven ; 
I have thy pledge of peace — my heart is shriven. 



MAUD. 

Baby with the hat and plume, 
And the scarlet cloak so fine, 
Come where thou hast rest and room, 
Little Baby mine. 

Whence those eyes so crystal clear ? 
Whence those curls so silky soft ? 
Thou art Mother's darling dear, 
I have told thee oft. 

I have told thee many times. 
And repeat it yet again, 
Wreathing thee about with rhymes. 
Like a flowery chain ; 

Rhymes that sever and unite 
As the blossom fetters do. 
As the Mother's weary night 
Happy days renew. 



76 MAUD. 

Like a silvery vision thou, 
Twinkling, as a distant star, 
And the lustre on thy brow 
Shineth from afar. 

Like a sunbeam in the room, 
Creeping near thy mother's heart; 
Shade of discontent or gloom 

Comes not where thou art. 

Could I paint thee with a word, 
Pattern thee in dainty phrase, 
Thou transfigured humming-bird. 
Gem with spirit-blaze ! 

Like a gracious prophecy 

Sped where darkling caverns yawn, 

Like a cheerless winter sea 

Flushed with crimson dawn ; 

Thine unwonted cominsr brousjht 
More than Nature's rapture-right ; 
From the depth of darkness, taught 
God could bring the light — 



MAUD. 77 



Fate that visits us and grieves, 
Parts from us, love-reconciled. 
And the wrack of sorrow leaves 
The glory of the child. 



PARTING FROM BABT. 

The bud's mysterious beauty 
The flower doth seem to lose. 
The tender springtide greenness 
The ripening sun must use ; 
For fruits of nobler daring 
Fall blossoms of the heart. 
And thou must change, my Baby, 
All perfect as thou art. 

What ghosts of bitter Fancy 
My child has chased away ; 
First with her helpless pleading. 
Then with her fairy play ; 
A child of consolation 
"Whose presence fair and pure, 
Made in these months of nursing 
So much of heav'n secure. 



78 MAUD. 

But I must lose thee, Baby, 
As sprite is lost in soul, 
As drops that glitter, singly, 
Lie gleamless in their whole — 
Life waits to take thy measure 
Of bosom and of brain, 
Fits for thy tiny muscles 
The aye-increasing strain. 

Thy sins that are so pretty 
Must give sad virtues j)lace, 
And many a weary errand 
Restrain thy wanton grace ; 
Till, for a ruder harvest, 
Thy charms shall ripened be, 
And Baby, grown a Woman 
Is wooed away from me. 

Oh ! think of me, my darling. 
With thine own child at thy breast ; 
How soft I soothed thy wailing. 
How jealous, watched thy rest, — 
And read these foolish verses 
That keep the mother's eye 
From the small empty cradle 
Where Baby's wont to lie. 



MAUD. 



BABY S KP^-TURN. 



Welcome again to thy father's roof — 
Thou dreamer of innocent dreams ! 
Flower of pure and constant breath, 
Shadow of sunniest gleams ! 

With the eyes that speak for the untried lips, 
And the little, stammering tongue. 
And the arms, like an amulet of price, 
O'er the Mother's shoulders flung ; 

And the curls that ring, like silver bells, 
With the voice's silvery chime. 
Each counted and combed, none broken yet 
In the weary tangle of time. 

** *** *** 

Thy beauty shall train its blossom wreath 

O'er the homely fetters of care. 

While the household angels that cling round thy 

path. 
Shall lighten the burthen of prayer. 



LOVE IN EXILE. 

Since ye have banished Beauty from my soul, 
I wander in a faint and drear amaze ; 
Gone are the ancient, the familiar ways, 
Strained the fine bonds of sufferance and control. 

The utterness of sorrow none can know 

Who have one help, assured, tho' distant far ; 

One fiery love, concentred to a star — 

Night should be sombre that such stars may show. 

They venture evil that they little guess. 
Who hide that shining mercy from our eyes ; 
What though it mark a dreamer's paradise ? 
It is a world 'twixt us and nothiuOTCSS. 



'o 



Since they are gone, the blissful sights and sounds, 
All hideous forms of ill assail my mind ; 
I hear th^ Demon's subtle speech behind, 
I see the Present's atheistic bounds. 



LOVE IN EXILE. 81 

And then, I cast a shuddering, pitying look 
Upon the fall'n — ^perhaps their virtue strove 
To bridge th' abyss with daring and high love. 
And, failing, perished in the leap they took. 

In this divorce from Beauty lies a wrong — 
I must deny her, I who hold her faith 
Deep in my heart, and fervent unto death. 
While she is outlawed from my sight and song. 

My mortal frame is welded to her might, 
And my soul worships, as a captive does. 
Who murmurs holy words 'mid heathen foes, 
While cruel hands forbid the happy rite. 

A sentry, forced to keep a foreign door, 
A soldier to an alien banner sold, 
A priest to whom the shrine is void and cold, 
Are of the things men mock at, or deplore. 

Eager to check, and tireless to reprove. 

Pause, ere you scare the meanest from his right, — 

God gives to each his measure of delight. 

To every nature its appropriate love. 



MOKNTXG. 



I'll have thee greet me in thine early hours ; 

The dew of morning thrilling in thy words, 

And the first music of the wakened birds 

That pant at noon, and hang their heads at even ; 

Thou, radiant in the first surprise of heaven, 

And the sweet shock of re-created powers, 

Shalt welcome me, with thought and hope returning, 

Ere Day has set his weary task of learning. 

While, on the breezy vantage, standing free. 

Thou renderest glad obeisance to the Sun ; 

Thus shalt thou meet th' impulsive bound of one » 

Who, thanking God for life, forgets not thee. 



WHAT I HAVE. 

In this world of hasty knowing, in this world of doubt 

and dread, 
Where men die with heart unopened, and the word of 

Fate unsaid. 
They who mete and they who gather, counting out the 

shining spoil, 
Bade me stand and tarry reck'ning, show my wages 

and my toil. 

Comes a beggar to the banquet where the full in heai't 

rehearse. 
He shall take his place in silence, he shall neither bless 

nor curse ; 
We must cover his short-comings with a treasure of 

our own — 
Meet it is, in spirit-council, men's possessions should be 

shown. 



84 WHAT I HAVE. 

Let me pass then, as a spendtlu-ift, with a single golden 

coin 
I shall never risk or barter, for a kingdom or a 

mine ; 
Not for bread would I exchange it, tho' the wolf should 

gnaw my bones, 'm 

Not for pearls of purest water, not for wealth of 

priceless stones. 

Nor the child I dearest cherish, shall inherit with my 

land 
This, my chiefest of resources, shut within a dying 

hand ; 
Not too costly for the passage of the dark and silent 

sea. 
If but Love, star-crowned, immortal, shall afford me 

company. 



WHAT I BEAK 

On the dark and troubled billo^vs, lo ! thou gleamest, 

as a star, 
And we catch a pallid lustre ere we lose thy trace 

afar. 
What the burthen on thy bosom ? is it treasure, is it 

weed? 
Glows that whiteness with thy rapture, is it deathly 

with thy need ? 

'Tis a boon beyond all asking that I bear upon my 

breast. 
As beyond Hope's trembling urgings, direst Certainty 

is best. 
Show your garlands, wave your banners, call your 

joyaunce half divine ; 
Yours" are warm and living pleasures, but the dead, 

cold gem is mine. 



86 WHAT I BEAR. 

He is mine, but not to crown me, not to take my passive 

hand, 
Not to lead me forth, the proudest, chosen from a chosen 

band; 
Could a ring unite our fortunes, it should wed the sky 

and sea, — 
Draw me up from storm and battle, draw my lov'd one 

down to me. 

He is mine by lips that speak not, by the calm, impas- 
sive brow. 

By the eyes whose lids are marble, fix'd on other 
visions now. 

By the deathless bond of sorrow, by the length of joy 
deferred. 

By the sign of lofty meaning, and the deep remembered 
word. 

As yon ocean-island woman many a league her husband 

bore, 
Swimming painfully and breathless, that the dead might 

reach the shore ; 
Without brighter hope or promise to uphold her weary 

way. 
Than to lay him where the steadfast Earth should 

shelter his decay ; 



WHAT I BEAR. 87 

So, thro' seas that swell to madness with the buffet of 

the storm, 
In the arms that struggle onward, still I bear his 

lifeless form. 
Till some wave, with swift uplifting, on the sands shall 

lay us both, 
On the bosom of God's mercy, in the wholeness of our 

troth. 



SUE. 

She was a freak of Nature's joy, 

A flow'ret wonder-pied, — 
As startling as a pansy found 

Black-leaved, and golden eyed. 

Her voice was borrowed from the choir 
That rings the vernal years ; 

Her temper was ethereal fire 
That calmed itself in tears. 

Some nameless touch of God's delight 

Fell on her, as she lay 
An infant, dreaming heavenly dreams, 

And never passed away. 

Her laughter, many-voiced and full, 
Had not one scornful strain ; 

Her eyes, that flashed defiant mirth. 
Were tender and humane. 



SUE. 89 

She wore the radiance of her youth 

As though she felt it not ; 
And while she held you with her speech, 

Her beauty was forgot. 

For Soul to outward Beauty is 

As Sun to dawning Day, 
The rosy drapery vanishes 

Before the conquering ray. 

Twas hers to move in fearlessness, 

And throne herself at ease ; 
Too royal were her gifts, that she 

Should condescend to please. ' 

Oh ! dread and discontent of life ! 

Do angels reason why 
The small of soul grow smaller still, 

While great hearts break and die ? 

******* 
She left us in the sweet, calm June, 

When all things tend to rest ; 
And her own bud of summer lay 

Half-ripened in her breast. 



90 SUE. 

It needs no name to make her known- 
Her form of love and grace 

Endures to marble in true hearts, 
Her deathless resting-place. 

Yet could I an immortal paint 

In high, heroic glee, 
Outvying summer winds and waves 

In leaping ecstasy ; 

But sorrow-touched, as having borne 

A woman's destiny, 
Quick tears, in loving eyes surprised 

Would answer : This is She. 



s. p. 

Unclose, sad shrine, tliy shrouded breast, 

Expectant to receive him ; 
Give, ere the dust to dust return, 

All that thou hast to give him — 

One hallowing rite, one parting prayer, 

Deep as the heart's pulsation ; 
One word that points to whence shall come 

If ever, consolation. 

One hour that holds the cherished dead 

For us, the ever dying ; 
We, wrung by Nature's agony, 

And he, serenely lying. 

Sound, wailing Anthem — ^lend thy voice 

To thoughts we cannot utter. 
Till, in the dim, mysterious void. 

The wings of angels flutter. 



92 s. p. 

We've laid a garland on his bier 
Of fresh and fragrant blossom, 

Of flowers, like him, untimely plucked 
From Nature's wintry bosom. 

Gather around him, faithful hearts, 
So fain from ill to shield him. 

Before yon reddening Sun departs, 
To Darkness ye must yield him. 

And thou, for whose ecstatic grief 
No thought fit word can borrow ; 

Rise up, beneath thy widowed garb, 
The royal robe of sorrow ; 

Move, followed close by tearful eyes. 

And sobbing benediction. 
To where th' inexorable gate 

Shuts him from our affliction. 

Bear bravely, to the last farewell — 
This anguish too, is fleeting ; 

The path, slow winding from his grave. 
Leads on, to happier meeting. 



s. p. 93 

Life must resume its wonted task, 

Its care, unblest without him, — 
Thou wouldst not wake him ? Let him lie 

With his stately youth about him. 

He lies, enshrined in holy hope, 

Embalsamed in affection. 
In hope, in love, whose deathless pledge 

Is Nature's resurrection. 



WIDOW'S WORDS. 

How easy was't to gather and to work 
With this right hand, intent to feel its way, 
When the weak left a loving grasp upheld, 
And tender eyes to mine were sun and stay. 

The deep, enamoured heart, that ever drew 
The inspiration of its life from mine ; 
Oh sure ! the votary completes the God, 
And worship concentrates the vague Divine. 

I grew heroic from his faith in me, — 
As a fair landscape in a mirror black. 
My soul, whose lustre has no hue of light. 
Was fain to give his cloudless beauty back. 

Struck by an icebolt fell the palsied hand, 
The mirror sickened with a ghastly breath, 
And in its depth and darkness now was seen 
Slow vanishing, the pallid spoil of death. 



widow's words. 95 

The fight is at its hottest, only now 
Th' unflinching escort from my side is flown ; 
The web is on my fingers, but the ray 
That made its fineness beautiful, dies down. 

And thus I sit, bewildered in my grief. 
Or walk beneath the burthen of my doubt, 
Striving, with little heart, to do and bear, 
Since Time is left, with daylight blotted out. 



THE NUESEEY. 

" Come, sing for us, dear Mother, 
A song of the olden times ; 
Of the merry Christmas carol, 
Of the happy New Year chimes ; 
Nor sit here, idle-handed, 
To hang your head and grieve. 
Beside the blazing hearthstone 
This pleasant Winter's eve." 

Then she sang, to please the children, 
With half-forgetful tongue, 
Some merry-measured roundel 
Of the happy days and young ; 
But, pierced with sudden sorrow. 
The words came faint and slow, 
Till one, in childish panic. 
Cried : " Mother, sing not so ! " 

Then all the Kttle creatures 
Looked wondering in her eyes ; 
And the Baby nestled nearer, 
Startled at their surprise ; 



THE NURSERY. 97 

The voice grew thin and quavered, 
Low drooped the weary head, 
Till the breath of song was stifled, 
And tears burst forth instead. 

For misty memories covered 
The children from her ken, 
And down the bitter river 
She dropped — no mother then ; 
No sister, helpmeet, daughter. 
Linked to historic years ; 
An agonizing creature 
That looked to God in tears. 

But when some sudden turning 
Had checked her hopeless way, 
She saw the little faces 
No longer glad or gay ; 
And as they gazed, bewildered 
By grief they could not guess, 
Their sympathetic silence 
Was worse than her distress. 

Then she tore the fatal vesture 
Of agony aside ; 

And showed, with mimic gesture, 
7 



98 THE NURSERY. 

How naughty children cried. — 
And told of hoary castles 
By giant warders kept, 
Of deep and breathless forests 
Where tranced beauties slept ; 
Weaving in rainbow madness 
The cloud upon her brain, 
Till they forgot her weeping, 
And she forgot her pain. 

'Twere well to pour the soul out 
In one convulsive fit. 
And rend the heart with weeping. 
If Love were loosed from it. 
But all the secret sorrow 
That underlies our lives, 
Must wait the true solution 
The great progression gives. 

Those griefs so widely gathered. 
Those deep, abyssmal chords, 
Broken by wailing music 
Too passionate for words. 
Find gentle reconcilement 
In some serener breast. 
And touch with deeper pathos 
Its symphonies of rest. 



A LETTER. 

As notes that seek a far response, 
Or moonlight, falling on the sea, 
Flit past the sullen, dark profound, 
Your genial greetings touch not me. 

We are too far apart, and you 
Too closely wrapt in blessedness, 
Pressing a cup whose brim allows 
No rosef-leaf, in its sweet excess. 

The misty realm of dreams to-night 
Shall hold us, in its halls of rest — 
The mighty God-soul of the world 
Includes us, vaguely, in his breast ; 

But we can meet not, destined thou 
On Joy's wild impetus to soar, 
I, to rest prostrate, like the dead, 
Who know nor Love, nor longing, more. 



100 A LETTER. 

Yet wander, woodnote, for thy mate, 
Or, moonbeam, wed th' inconstant sea- 
The sorrow of my heart is deep. 
And therefore it sufficeth me. 



THE POET'S WISH. 

It was a sad, mysterious joy, 

The poet gave his buried friend, 

That to his country's native flower 

His mouldering corse should beauty lend. 

Grief, to sublime of passion wrought, 
A Guardian at thy tomb shall stand, 
" And, from thine ashes may be made 
The violet of thy native land." 

It were a thought of bitterness. 

In height and flush of life, to know 

That, from our forms exanimate 

Some baneful poison plant should grow, i^ 

Thus, happier he to whose lone grave 
Nor Love, nor Fame, its tribute gives, 
Than who, illustrious, leaves a seed 
To harm the simplest soul that lives. 



ENTSAGEN. 

As One that gazes, starbound, on the sky, 
Heeds not a pageant passing in the street ; 
As one swept onward with a favoring wind 
Recks not of wild sea-treasures at his feet ; 

As one that walks in high, prophetic dreams, 
Forgets the thi'ob of earth, and sense of pain ; 
As conquerors tarry not to count their dead, 
Nor lovers weigh their losing in their gain : 

So, teachest thou, the soul by God endowed 
With lofty impulse, and poetic sweep, 
Bereft of all its earthly heritage. 
Should stiU disdain to struggle, or to weep ; 

Should not defend the prizes of the heart 
With straining grasp, with agonizing tears. 
Nor, bruised and martyr'd, ask aloud of God 
Its ravished beauty, for the scar it wears. 



ENTSAGEN. 103 

Life hunts us blindfold, plucking at our hands, 
Mocking us on, eluding us with jeers ; 
Breathless, we roll our darkened eyes for help, 
With heathen laughter ringing in our ears. 

Thus we relinquish treasures of high trust. 
Thus, weakly cling where we should render up. 
When, with free sight and arm, 'twere scarcely hard 
To seize and dash down the disputed cup. 

But, friend, for such proud gesture one should wear 
A haughty forehead, kept by beetling brows. 
An eye that melts and quivers not, a lip 
That hardens to the enmity it vows. 

Oh ! stood I thus enfranchised, long enough 
To gather up each wrecked and wronged delight, 
Commit them to th' abyss with holy words. 
Then, tearless, front the calm, eternal night ! 

And oh ! my womanish heart — if this were done, 
I should but bend, with fixed and shaded eye, 
Follow the ghosts of parted happiness. 
Then, with wild tossing arms, plunge down and die. 



THE BEAUTIFUL. 

Thou warn'st me, I should heed the Beautiful ? 
Stay then — reveal it to the spell-bound sense. 
Not with the eye, the ear, or heart, I feel 
Man's dignity, and Nature's excellence. 

I know them, as we know a word of God 
Told in mysterious whispers of the night, 
Which, waking, is not found, but kept in heart, 
Till straggling Faith is ravished of its right. 

Thus, rising from a dream, but dreaming still, 
I walked, in vision-haunted maidenhood. 
Fed with high fancies, all unlearn'd of life. 
Save its young promise of ideal good. 

I found the temple, but the shrine was barCj 
The God invisible, and rapt from sense ; 
I wove my chaplet, waiting for the priest 
Whose holy lesson should dismiss me thence. 



THE BEAUTIFUL. 105 

I sat and wrought upon the marble steps, 

Secure in faith and young humility, 

While men passed by — sometimes a gracious one 

To whom my heart said, throbbing, " Thou art he ! " 

But these went on, unheeding of their power — 
Theirs was another rite, another feast ; 
Nor did my love wait on them — it abode, 
Steadfast and strong, the coming of the priest. 

So was my garland wreathed with little aid, 
So were its petals blent too waywardly. 
Wild growths put gentle garden-flowers to shame, 
And poison-vines hung, trailing, from my knee. 

I chose the best my scanty learning showed. 
Nor ever left the consecrated spot. 
But to return, with new-discovered spoils, 
From hill-side villa, wood, or garden-plot. 

Soon, little feet essayed to follow mine, 
Sharing at will my wanderings, and my hap ; 
Fingers, whose sense was nicer than my sight. 
Laid tiny offerings on the mother's lap. 



106 THE BEAUTIFUL. 

But here she sits, still waiting, dreaming on 
Of some contentment, scarce to be conceived, 
Some soul of blessedness, some smile of peace. 
Some utterance, heard but once to be believed. 

Oh ! not the features of a Grecian god. 
The holiness of manhood's noblest saint, 
y The wisdom whose wan halo wastes the brow, 
The heart full-passionate, and free from taint ; 

Not all this high conception, which enshrines 
Divine delight in manly majesty, 
Can more than shadow what that unknown Priest, 
That unseen Beautiful, remain to me. 

Is it a dream that he shall surely come. 
And lay his hand upon these weary eyes ? 
At the transcendent virtue of his touch 
Shall not the soul from wreck and ruin rise ? 

Shall I not drop my trivial task, and stretch 
My hands for garlands in his bosom borne? 
Shall not fresh greenness glorify the spot 
Where I have dwelt, uncomforted, forlorn? 



THE BEAUTIFUL. 107 

Shall I break out in weeping, or in song, 
Or glow with shame, to own myself so dull, 
When, as he smiles the death-film from my sight, 
My heart shall say, " This was the Beautiful " ? 



WHERE IS THE BEAUTIFUL? 

Where is the Beautiful ? in these sharp airs ? 
Tiiese skies from which God sends no pleasure down, 
These hills with sad monotony of curve, 
Fixed by long Winter in perpetual frown ? 

Or in these men and women, fashioned most 
In features of an undelightful mould, 
Ardent in all that shows self paramount, 
"Where self should melt and mingle, hard and cold. 

With pitiless remembrance of the faults 
That God and Time pass over leniently. 
These on a brother's blemishes confer 
The demon's gift of immortality. 

I have seen saintly blood that, long congealed. 
At some prayer-hallowed festival would melt 
From deathless virtue in the heart it fed, 
And latent love, forgotten ne'er, once felt. 



WHERE IS THE BEAUTIFUL ? 109 

Methought that in those drops, by fervent heat 
To life and ancient charity renewed, 
Were pulses, human holier than could thrill 
Through the whole current of your watery blood. 

Oh ! sordid life — oh ! conflict desperate, 
Oh ! comfort shredded from a scanty hand ; 
Oh ! fainting feeble ones, who drop beside 
The thorny way, and wail throughout the land. 

Though I am one whom men care not to praise. 
And in the ages' service make small show, 
I could for you a thankless task assay. 
In your defence strike many a valorous blow. 

Ye asked for love — these gave you fiery zeal. 
They locked your gentle souls in iron fate ; 
And when the breast was bared for nearer help. 
They smote you with a heart impenetrate. 

Come, share the freer gifts of poverty, — 
Of those I have, I will refuse you none. 
Upbraid you from no Stoical retreat 
Of Virtue more ambitious than your own. 



110 WHERE IS THE BEAUTIFUL ? 



Take my poor treasures — they are quickly told — 
A soul whose tears and laughter breathe of song ; 
A mournful humour, and a merry wit, 
A heart that harbours no distemper long ; 



And higher helps, as beacons set, to guide 

In this night-world, where ev'n the wisest grope, 

Sisters twin-hearted, dear maternal joys, 

The dead, the distant — nearer, Home and Hope. 



^ POST SCEIPTUM. 

When thus I reasoned of the Beautiful 
My vexed and querulous thought had not outgone 
The comfort of the since instructing years. 
Nor thy fair face, my last and gentlest-born. 

Thou dost the Eastern paradox reverse. 
Towards the far mountain-tops I could not flee, 
Whereon the heavenly vision seemed to rest — 
And waiting. Beauty was at home with me. 



AS IT SEEMS. 

Two faces, once familiar, that again 
Snatch silent greeting, with a crowd between ; 
But they long parted — set on heights of Time 
That gulfs divide, and constant shadows screen. 

The veil of separation rent in twain, 
Their eyes as in a dim cathedral met. 
Whose arches from the swiftly pairing years 
Its crystals from the glow of Hope, were set. 

Its Saints, the holy figures of the Dead, 
Fleeting, yet fixed as Love, the ever-true ; 
While, glimmering, thro' the ruined portal shows 
Like a far dream. Youth's sunny sky of blue. 

Iconoclastic Fortune spares the hut — 

The toil-browned peasant, and his patient wife, 

With little scope of sorrow or desire. 

Live out their harmless, vegetative life. 



112 AS IT SEEMS. 

But we, who strove to raise a pile on high 
Fit to embrace the organ-tone of Time, 
Who gave to weightiest thoughts an upward lift, 
Laying broad reasons, rounding rhyme to rhyme, 

Stand thunder-smitten, yet with stern command 
To bear Life's devastations, since our fall 
That else were solemnly desired, should bring 
Our gentle Parasites to ruin, all. 

For theirs is Beauty's office — she must fling 
Her glowing mantle o'er aU havoc made ; 
Soothing Decay with tireless services 
That cannot be commanded, nor repaid. 



AS IT IS. 

My soul is weary of this chant of woe 

Where rhyme attends on rhyme, as tear on tear ; 

I sit beside the waning lamp, and wait 

Some vigorous voice to break the spell of fear. 

Slow lustres lead us from the wild surprise 
Of early sorrows — stranger following strange. 
Till in th' uncertain, billowy waste we see 
No law save this, of unsubstantial change. 

In Childhood's Eden, 111 was ill at ease. 
The swift irruption of some demon foe. 
But the Grief-serpent fastens on the soul — 
Thenceforth the struggle to our life we owe. 

Fate, that can raise a beggar to a throne. 
Mocks him and thee, can rob as well as give ; 
From every lov'd possession thou mayst learn 
That thou canst be bereft of it, and live. 
8 



114 AS IT IS. 

A Queen, whose airy footsteps spurned the ground, 
Whose fingers were too fair for daintiest lips, 
Mends her worn kerchief for a felon's end, 
Scarce wondering at the desolate eclipse. 

Or men to life by keen enjoyment wed. 
On th' unpitying wheel stretched suddenly, 
Tease the pale headsman for the boon withheld 
Of Death, their torture hunger's luxury. 

We who aspire to harmonies divine, 
Taxing Creation for its master-tone. 
Soaring to heights untenable and crazed 
Were once the daring inspiration gone ; 

Let us be modest — we are rich to win 
One jewel from the treasure-laden deep. 
Or, from the wreck of affluent loves, to hold 
A single faithful breast whereon to weep. 

A breast to weep upon ? oh ! this at least, 
I cried, with outstretched arm, and sudden wail ; 
Experience shuts our asking with one hope. 
Trust in thyself, and God, who cannot fail. 



A VISION OF MONTGOMERY PLACE. 

Who knocks at Dr. Wendell's door ? 

Who waits with patient feet 
For " aloes, pil et colocynth," 

Or " Rhubarb, tincture sweet ? " 

Who knocks ? the many little ones 

In whom his home rejoices, 
Desert their play, and crowd to peep 

With eager eyes and voices. 

" What if 'twere Santa Glaus, arrived 

With weighty load of toys, 
With dolls for little maids' delight, 

And rods for rampant boys ? " 

Then, peering thro' the glass, they see 

By the uncertain light. 
What seems the very soul of frost 

Set in the silent night. 



116 A VISION OF MONTGOMERY PLACE. 

" Nay, do not fear me, little ones, 

I have no ill-intent ; 
But tell Papa an Author waits 

And eke, a penitent." 

The children to the study run, 
The father comes straightway ; 

But argues, ere he draws the bolt : 
" Give me your name, I pray. 

" You Authors are so hot of blood, 

So sensitive of skin. 
One wants one's surgeon's mittens on 

Before one lets you in. 

" The Swan of Cambridge might you be ? 

Or Lowell, fresh of face, 
Or Hillard, bringing palm-leaves from 

His swift Italian race ? 

" Or Emerson, whose teeming Muse 
Craved ' cantharids to eat ' ? " 

" Nay, nay, undo the door, and see 
A woman in a sheet. 



A VISION OF MONTGOMERY PLACE. 117 

" A woman in a sheet, that looks 

A statue, as she stands, 
And proffers you a knotted scourge 

From softly folded hands." 

" Pass hence, pale shade ! dost take me for 

A Haynau ? By the Rood 
I never flogged a woman yet, 

And know not if I could." 

With fixed regard, with rigid lip, 

Replies the penitent : 
" I was the saucy ' Commonwealth ' — 

Oh ! help me to repent. 

" Behind my embrasure well-braced, 

With every chance to hit, 
I made your banner, waving wide, 

A mark for wayward wit. 

" 'Twas now my turn to walk the street. 

In dangerous singleness. 
And run, as bravely as I might, 

The gauntlet of the press. 



118 A VISION OF MONTGOMERY PLACE. 

" And when I passed your balcony 

Expecting only blows, 
From height of vantage-ground, you stooped 

To whelm me with a rose. 

" A rose, intense with crimson life 
And hidden perfume sweet — 

Call out your friends, and see me do 
My penance, in the street." 

" Oh no ! " the Doctor shivering cried : 

" The night is very cold ; 
Step in, or on the threshold here 

My lesson shall be told. 

" We sat as critics, in those days. 
High-talking, wondrous wise, — 

"We meet as poets now, and look 
With more synthetic eyes. 

" The critic is allowed to rule 

The common law of art — 
The poet takes his judgment from 

The pleading of the heart." 



FROM THE LATTICE. 

Let it content thee that I call thee dear — 
Thou'rt wise and great, and others name thee so. 
From me, what gentler tribute woiildst thou know 
Than the slight hand, upon thy shoulder laid, 
And the full heart, high throbbing, not afraid. 

No, not afraid — of manly stature thou, 
Of power compact, and temper fervor-tried, — 
Yet I, a weakling, in thine armour hide. 
Or, sick beyond the medicine of Art, 
Hang on the healthful pulses of thine heart. 

In waking dreams I see thine outstretched arms 
That conquer night and distance for my sake. 
Like the brave swimmer who was wont to break 
The crystals of the deep in shivering light, 
To bless his Ladye with his radiant sight. 



120 FROM THE LATTICE. 

There is a sense in which I call thee mine — 
Not as possession runs in Youth's hot blood ; 
But in the helpful, self-renunciant mood 
Of Aspiration, daring, hand in hand, 
Tasks that in mystical conjunction stand. 

Have I not been too thoughtlessly surprised 
Into this mood, so near akin to loving ? 
I hold myself to vexed and fond reproving ; 
Saying, wert thou then so eager to impart, 
Thou couldst not hide one secret in thy heart ? 

There is a dead, immortal maiden speaks 
Responsive, from the legendary tomb 
That treasures, incorrupt, her bridal bloom : 
" If I could wish back the advantage ta'en, 
'Twere to be kind, and give it him again." 



A MAID'S REQUISITION. 

Dare not tell me coldly that you love me, 
Smiling calm, with glittering eyes and teeth ; 
You might speak it, bending close above me, 
With a brow suffused, and failing breath. 

Is there nought of trouble and commotion 
In these words, where hope and madness meet ? 
Deep convulsions shake the heart of ocean 
When his wavelets kiss beloved feet. 

Stars that shed their messages of beauty 
Prisoned in the deep, impassive night ? 
Speak they cold and calm as Fate and Duty ? 
Nay — they throb out sentences of light. 

But is't true, and am I better, dearer 
Than Life's blossoms that around thee fall ? 
Never deem that words can make it clearer — 
Let me feel it — tell it not at all. 



IN THE VINEYAED. 

I AM God's hireling, not his child beloved ; 
In the wide market-place I stand and wait 
For the brief nod and gesture of the Fate 
That motions me to weal or woe, unmoved. 

Nor lives this daring in my vexed mind, 
To struggle towards him for a moment's ease. 
As a babe, striving towards his father's knees. 
Looks up for love in eyes unchanging kind. 

" Where is thy treasure," those stem eyes should say, 
" Flung to the winds with wild and haughty thrift ? 
What was the traffic of thy holy gift ? " 
And I should smother sobs, and turn away. 

Yet dwells remembrance in my inmost soul. 
Of happy tasks, and toil divinely glad. 
When I stood armed for action ere he bade, 
And, bounding at his voice, o'erstripped the goal. 



IN THE VINEYAKD. 123 

Oh ! could I find him, as a child surprised, 
Led by a menial thro' unwonted streets, 
Makes wistful search in every face he meets, 
And leaps up toward the dear one recognized. 

Or, held and hastened by the Unseen hand. 
Now pressing back, now swift and rude in wrath, 
Look up, where Glory shoots across my path 
And see the Father for the Master stand ! 

Give me this vision where my feet shall stop. 
Spurning no more the earth's resistless round ; 
"Where Will and Courage reach their viewless bound, 
And pausing, let the passive body drop. 

Grant me, that moment, the great thought of thee, 
Then, leave me life, or nothingness at will, 
Beyond this prayer, are Faith and Reason still, 
For that one moment is Eternity. 



THE WOLF WITHm THE MOTHER'S SHEEP- 

FOLD. 

The black wolf waited for my pretty Lamb, 
Watching some careless hour to seize his prey, 
I traced his lurking footsteps every where, 
Nor dared to gather hope from his delay. 

The little one was loath to leave her play, 

And mocked with smiles the mournful looks of each ; 

Wildly she thrust the arm of help away, 

And, faint in breath, grew wayward in her speech. 

The mother could not weep and durst not pray. 
Knowing what grief can happen here below ; 
She calmed herself in spasms, envying most 
The dead, the childless, all who shun such woe. 

And, circling still, the Terrible drew near, 

In swift approaches, certain of his aim, 

While we, who would have died to come between, 

Could only look, as on a desperate game. 



THE WOLF, ETC. 125 

And narrower grew the margin of our hope, 
The victim struggling in half-conscious pangs ; 
!Till, when the wild wolf's midnight hour had come. 
At the fair throat he struck, with deadly fangs. 

But then, the radiant shepherd intervened, 
With arms divine, to ward the savage blow ; 
He raised our darling from her death-like swound. 
And, with one gesture, sped th' insatiate foe. 

Thus, the dark terror passed at break of day, 
And on the mother's heart came sudden change ; 
She had been fain to measure with a look 
That gulf of anguish — now, delight seemed strange. 

But since that blest deliverance, in her child. 
Another's treasure lent, she seems to hold ; 
The shepherd's touch has left the shining sign 
That marks the sinless, numbered in his fold. 

Anon with trembling joy the mother pleads 
For her sweet idol 'gainst the claim divine ; 
Then, vanquished, lays her anxious weapon down, 
Saying only, " Take me too, if she be thine." 



THE LAMB WITHOUT. 

Whene'er I close the door at night, 
And turn the creaking key about, 
A pang renewed assails my heart — 
I think, my darling is shut out. 

Think that, beneath these starry skies. 
He wanders, with his little feet ; 
The pines stand, hushed in glad surprise, 
The garden yields its tribute sweet. . 

Thro' every well-known path and nook 
I see his angel footsteps glide. 
As guileless as the Pascal Lamb 
That kept the Infant Saviour's side. 

His earnest eye, perhaps, can pierce 
The gloom in which his parents sit ; 
He wonders what has changed the houst 
And why the cloud hangs over it. 



THE LAMB WITHOUT. 127 

He passes with a pensive smile — 
Why do tliey linger to grow old, 
And what the burthen on their hearts ? 
On him shall sorrow have no hold. 

Within the darkened porch I stand — 
Scarce knowing why, I linger long ; 
Oh ! could I call thee back to me 
Bright bird of heaven, with sooth or song ! 

But no — the wayworn wretch shall pause 
To bless the shelter of this door ; 
Kinsman and guest shall enter in, 
But my lost darling never more. 

Yet, waiting on his gentle ghost. 
From sorrow's void, so deep and dull, 
Comes a faint breathing of delight, 
A presence calm and beautiful. 

I have him, not in outstretched arms, 
I hold him, not with straining sight, 
While in blue depths of quietude ' 

Drops, like a star, my still " Good-night." 



128 . THE LAMB WITHOUT. 

Thus, nightly, do I bow my head 
To the Unseen, Eternal force ; 
Asking sweet pardon of my child 
For yielding him in Death's divorce. 



He turned away from childish plays, 
His baby toys he held in scorn ; 
He loved the forms of thought divine, 
Woods, flowers, and fields of waving corn. 

And then I knew, my little one 
Should by no vulgar lore be taught ; 
But by the symbols God has given 
To solemnize our common thought ; 

The mystic angles, three in one, 
The circling serpent's faultless round, 
And, in far glory dim, the Cross, 
Where Love o'erleaps the human bound. 



THE SHADOW THAT IS BORN WITH US. 

One said to me : reveal the untold grief 
Thou boldest, treasured in the inmost deep ; 
I have experience that may counsel thee, 
A heart to pity — ready eyes to weep — 

I see the cruel furrows in thy face, 
The cheek depressed, the wan and cheerless eye ; 
I ask thee wherefore — " 'tis that I am sad " — 
But wherefore sad ? Sit here, and tell me why. 

I can but tell thee ; I have tried to frame 
The legendary sorrows of my youth ; 
Then wondering paused, as at a fiction strange ; 
I spoke in fables — deeper lay the truth. 

I've made impatient efforts to uplift 
In words, the weight that hung upon my soul ; 
Oh ! senseless — while I battled with the air, 
Here lay the burthen, undisturbed and whole. 
9 



130 THE SHADOW THAT IS BORN WITH US. 

Mine is no grief that helps itself with tears, 
Or in wild sobbing passes from the breast ; 
Constant as Fate, inalienate as life, 
^Tis my employ of day, my nightly rest. 

It is a strife that heeds no set of sun, 
A discord daring and irresolute, 
A weary business without Sabbath pause, 
A problem ever endless to compute. 

Nor hand of leech nor surgeon can avail 
To heal the plague-spot, hopeless of rehef, 
The suicidal steel could reach it not ; 
1 sometimes deem, myself is all my grief. 

They say, my mother brought me forth in tears. 
And fed me from a melancholy breast ; 
Thus while she sleeps, her sorrow lives in me, 
A tie the envious grave has not supprest. 

But Heaven that gave such matter to ray life, 
Denied not love of art, nor plastic skill ; 
I mould an angel from the sombre mass, 
That, deeply bronzine, is an angel still. 



THE SHADOW THAT IS BORN WITH US. 131 

^ Content thee then, the secret of my life 

Not ev'n to Love's true hearing may belong, 

Only to His who set, to keep my lips, 

His guardians twain, of Silence and of Song. 



A MAN'S STORY. 

In the sad, long years, the estranging 
That lie, Hke a sombre screen 
Twixt thy lawless, impassioned ranging, 
And quiet that since hath been ; 
I have heard of an heart whose loving 
Turned ne'er from thy perilous wake. 
Outdaring the world's reproving, 
And anguish of death for thy sake. 

Now, as thou sit'st silent beside me, 
While the sunset draws near its end, 
And the down of the evening may hide me, 
Speak tenderly, friend to friend. 
While the fading mountains before thee 
Call the heights of thy wandering back, 
Recount me the love she bore thee, 
That failed not, for wrench or rack. 



A man's story. 133 

She laid her soft hand in my bosom, 
She bowed her young head at my feet ; 
She strewed with wild beauty and blossom 
The ways we rehearsed to meet. 
She withered in my displeasure, 
Was humblest before my praise, 
She lavished her heart's best treasure, 
Unconscious of years or days. 

She thought to afford me only 
The worship that was my due, 
A rapture intense and lonely, 
That endless time should renew ; 
To sit in her place and behold me 
Transfigured, as some fair star. 
With a heart leaping up to enfold me, 
Was a dream that she followed far. 

But, as beacon replies to beacon, 
So Love answered back to Love. 
Towards her blind unreasoned seeking 
My soul in its might did move ; 
The might of a man in his willing, 
That stays not for law or bound, 
That strides to its rash fulfilling. 
Then glances, aghast, around. 



134 A man's story. 

We met, and the shock astonished, 
But my arms were about her then ; 
By my fervent pleading admonished. 
She smiled, and took heart again. 
Thenceforth, as the moon in her glory 
Keeps heaven, through the storm-cloud's gloom, 
She carried her torchlight before me, 
Steadfast, till death and doom. 

The world made the struggle that followed, 
A wreck lies astrand on its shore. 
Where wild wrath of wild powers swallowed 
Love's treasures forevermore— 
When the terrible sequel o'ertook her, 
I felt, and was pained in her pain, 
But as Prudence decreed, I forsook her, 
To comfort her, never again. 

Between us, a silence of torment. 

That each is disdainful to break. 

That fretteth the soul as a garment, 

That stingeth the heart, like a snake — 

Should we meet, no sweet spasm of yearning. 

No startle of thrilling surprise. 

Our sad eyes are lowered, discerning 

The grave where the best of us lies. 



THE LIGHT FALLEN. 

A FRIEND was stricken from my life — 
I found no word to sob or saj ; 
One shiver marked the severed nerve, 
And I walked silent on my way. 

But from the bosom of my faith 
I missed its soul of loveliness, 
And, musing in my steps, I said : 
What unblest vacancy is this ? 

What light hath fall'n from soul and sky 
Whose absence should atflict so sore 
That I discern no heaven on high, 
Within, no Uving Saviour more ? 

I dreamed not how my worship hung 
On human features, till that day 
That showed th' ideal presence gone. 
And life's sweet Christ entombed for aye. 



THE TWO STARS. 

I, THE Mistress of the Valley, 
In the twilight soft and dim, 
Hold the headway of my fancies 
'Gainst the evening shadows grim. 

In the distance strives the streamlet 
With the neighbor's rustic flute. 
In the boughs the breeze doth nestle, 
And all other things are mute. 

In the little, silent cottage 
Where, as to the palace door. 
Comes the sunshine, every morning. 
To be slowly darkened o'er ; 

Gathered lie the pretty babies, 
In the silken snood of sleep. 
While the angels keep above them, 
Folded wing and noiseless sweep. 



THE TWO STARS. 137 

Straight before me rise twin hillocks 
Like to brothers, matched in size, 
Shutting out the distant landscape. 
And the flush of evening skies. 

While the doubtful face of heaven 
Looks beyond me and above, 
As with one red eye of justice, 
And one lenient eye of love. 

Far to Sight though near to Reason, 
The new risen moon appears, 
Like a martyr-scar of glory 
Shining through eternal years. 

So ! be merciful, thou Heaven ! 
Do not crush me as I stand 
In the dark and narrow defile, 
With the hills on either hand. 

Where the shadows grew perplexing, 
And no outlet was to see. 
Bear this witness to my weakness, 
That my striving was to thee. 



138 . THE TWO STARS. 

Smile upon my latest struggle, 
Tenderly my fault reprove, 
With thy fiery eye of justice. 
And thy lenient eye of love. 



A WORD WITH THE BROWNINGS. 

f I AM told you do not praise me, Barret Browning, 
high-inspired, 
Nor you, Robert, full of manhood, with your Angel 

interlyred ; 
In my sometime invocation of the poet-brotherhood, 
'Twas a word from you I wanted, in a word, a sen- 
tence, — good. 

'Twas your Worships I stood greeting, as I waited, cap 
in hand. 

On the unattained excellence, and far-loved Mother- 
land ; 

Of the best things and remotest, you, the spirit-types 
so fair — 

I appealed to you, forgetful of the friends that nearer 
were. 



140 A WORD WITH THE BROWNINGS. 

But no word came^ o'er the water, though I strained my 

listening ear; 
Had they known the need so urgent, they had sent a 

shout of cheer. 
That had been an alms, and not a right, discomforting 

always — 
God forbid that holy Pity should grow faithless, moving 

Praise. 

Praise is of the awful voices, of the face whose smile 

or frown 
Helps the martyr to his glory, casts the laurelled tyrant 

down ; 
For the scales that weigh men's actions, measure too 

the poet's song, 
And the hidden thoughts of Justice to Eternity 

belong. 

Keep your counsel, poet-household, ye, the mystic one 

in three. 
Strength of man with love of woman, and the king, 

Futurity — 
Ye shall hear my fond upbraidings, if ye hold your 

Winter's reign 
By the Casa Guidi windows, or the swarming banks 

of Seine. 



A WORD WITH THE BROWNINGS. 141 

Think how little is in Nature, if in littleness of eye, 
You resume it from your chamber, or your carriage, 

rolling by ; 
Merely shabby ancient mountains, and a tiresome old 

sea, 
Slow the rivers, dull the forest, adding weary tree 

to tree. 

'Tis not yours, this idle strophe, but in all that you 

have seen. 
Does no inward grace add splendor to the purple, and 

the sheen ? 
Wants there not a generous spirit for the finer joys of 

sight ? 
Heart must help the scenes around us, ere they 

minister delight. 

I remember summer mornings in a village poor and 

mean, 
With a railroad running near it, and a living oaken 

screen ; . 
When the Girlhood gathered round me, a decorous 

little band, 
As I read with fervent feeling, and your volumes in 

my hand. 



142 A WORD WITH THE BROWNINGS. 

Read the " Blot upon the Scutcheon," and the suit for 

'' Geraldine ; " 
"Paracelsus" and " Sordello," and "The Gondola" 

between, 
Read the " Drama of the Druses," leaving not a mystic 

sense 
That uplift your friends to wonder, in the praeter- 

perfect tense. 

Read with forefinger extended, with a fixed and furrow- 
ing brow ; 
With a voice that wept your pathos, or upheld your 

triumphs now ; 
And the white-robed ones drew nearer, and grew very 

loath to leave, 
For the warning bell of Noontide, or the shadowy nod 

of Eve. 

Oh ! I made it clear before them, with a mild ingenious 

brain 
Wound your tangled fancies smoothwise, brought your 

vanished thought again, — 
When they puzzled o'er the volumes, 'twas another 

thing, they said ; 
Tried a page or two, and left it, with some aching of 

the head. 



A WORD WITH THE BROWNINGS. 143 

One, the noblest and the dearest, in mj heart her 

worship lies, 
Nought forbids my lips to name her, save her meek 

remembered eyes, 
Said, " the verses you transfigured cannot touch me as 

before. 
Could they keep the soul you gave them, I would read 

them evermore." 

I was happier in those mornings, when my voice, still 

keeping youth 
That had fled my wayward features, gave you nobly, in 

your truth, 
And there seemed a natural fitness twixt the burthen 

and the tone. 
Than when wider walls gave echo to a music all my 

own. 

Or it might be at a banquet, one who sits to satirize 
Called you up to suffer judgment, I to help your 

obsequies ; 
You had cracked his teeth with harshness, urged the 

man I need not name. 
" Sir, you do not understand this," cried your champion, 

all aflame. 



144 A WORD WITH THE BROWNINGS. 

Had you questioned my endeavour with the overflow- 
ing heart 

That gives tender recognition to the uncrowned child 
of Art, 

Had you stood before the temple, as the heavenly 
donors stand, 

Stooping to bestow your largesse, you had grasped a 
Sister's hand. 

But the Sister still, unbidden, towards your distant 

faces turns. 
Still pursues your hallowed friendship, which some 

nobler duty earns. 
Even to wait, afar, unrecognized, is pleasure wiling 

pain; 
For I hear you, and I answer you, again, and yet 

again. 



ONE WORD MORE WITH E. B. B. 

I CAN but fill the page I owe 
With pictures of the things I see. 
I pause to feel the noontide glow, 
And bless what God ordains to be. 

This tireless harmony of life, 
Impulse and weight divinely poised ; 
This upward flight of Thought and Love, 
These slow perfections, recognized. 

And could I ask, it were to heal 
The struggles of this Mother-mould, 
That flings us flaming, from its breast. 
That hides our ashes, spent and cold. 

1 could implore great gifts of Peace 

To ransom grief-embittered hearts. 

That self might sink, that Wrath might cease, 

And Plenty speed the genial Arts. 



10 



146 ONE WORD MORE WITH E. B. B. 

There are wlio thread unmeasured heights 
With spirits for their body-guard, 
Who vex with ill-directed flight, 
And sentence, mystical, and hard. 

I shrink before the nameless draught 
That helps to such unearthly things, 
And if a drug could lift so high, 
I would not trust its treacherous wings ; 

Lest, lapsing from them, I should fall, 
A weight more dead than stock or stone, — 
The warning fate of those who fly 
With pinions other than their own. 

The steady spheres of God outvie 
The fitful meteors of the brain ; 
These may be wanting to our need. 
To those, we never look in vain. 

We sleep in grief, or watch in pain, 
Or crushed with guilty burthens lie ; 
We rise to meet th' unfailing stars 
That smile forgiveness loftily. 



ONE WORD MORE WITH E. B. B. 147 

So Dante, from his dreadful way- 
Emerging, new in fear and awe. 
The heavenly signal recognized. 
And stood to bless th' eternal law. 

I lift my waning sight to them, 
Unchanged thro' all these changing years, 
And, strong in friends that cannot fail, 
Forget my errors, leave my tears. 



DANTE. 

He wore an honest hatred on his sleeve, 
Of red oppression and inhuman wrong ; 
Brief pause he made to question or to grieve, 
But, singing his incomparable song, 
Wove each great stanza of his life along. 

His hands were pure from gold, his heart from guile, 
Could the fixed features deign to wear a smile. 
It must have been the gala of some deed 
Whose doer's guerdon rested in that meed 
Most, tho' approving angels wept the while. 

In his immortal heart such virtue lies 
Of Love, that builds the shrine it consecrates. 
That who pursues the passion to the gates 
Whose music shuts out the uncertain Fates, 
Beholds it, deathless, in his Ladj's eyes. 



DANTE. 149 

Dante was lovelorn in his youthful days, 
With amorous wanderers fain to pass his time ; 
Nor only thus knew he those devious ways 
Set in the glory of his antique rhyme, — 
So much at least, his Legendary says. 

Seeking excuse. But this is further said : 
He was no Wanton — Eager Beauty laid 
Her ambush for him, from the laurel grove 
She darted, with his solemn traits in love. 
And in his breast her glorious capture made. 

Or swifter. Sorrow, with her eyes on fire, 
Their red glow ravished from her hollow breast, 
Laid her thin grasp upon the Poet's vest, 
Till, at her tale of agony confessed, 
Fainted the heart, and fell the wailing lyre. 

Rest, mid sepulchral marbles, dim and cold, 
Setting the lamp that saw thee over-wrought 
With thine unearthly subject — labour fraught 
With distant blessing, since our ages hold 
Their mirror to the greatness of thy thought. 



MOONLIGHT. 

Soft the all-embracing moonlight, 
Holds the lone one in its arms, 
And the nerves, high strung to sorrow, 
TTith its lambent touch disarms. 
From its softness I could model 
Many an image fair and free. 
But to-night I yield this power, 
It shall work its wiU on me. 

Oh ! this weary human longing 

For companions all mine own. 

Oh ! these eyes bereft of beauty, 

Oh ! this ear, unblest of tone ! 

Oh ! these lips that, prest to marble 

Turn to marble with its cold. 

Oh ! these dreams, whose empty thronging 

Leaves the heart, all unconsoled, — 



MOONLIGHT. 151 

Could a dove caress the silence 

With the healing of her wings ; 

Could some dear-bought heavenly treasure 

Stand for earth's beloved things ; 

Through the gracious ministration 

Of the gentle summer night, 

Free of shadows, blest in longing, 

I could soar to life and li^ht. 



THE PEISONER OF HOPE. 

As Samson in the temple of his foes — 
Be patient in the hand that crushes thee, — 
'Twere but one sudden struggle, one wild throe ; 
Like the blind Anarch, thou wert venged and free. 

This deadly power discerning in thyself, 
Keep guarded from the slow match of desire ; 
Who disembosoms the volcanic Earth 
Shall not forget to loose the latent fire. 

So in an atom lies the Infinite, 

Concentred thou mayst deem it, not confined ; 

So in the narrow prison of thy life 

Be conscious of the boundless ?cope of mind. 

Wherever truth can beckon. Thought can spring 
Setting her winged steps on whirling spheres ; 
She gains the upper calm — the height serene, 
And sees below, the pent domain of tears. 



THE PRISONER OF HOPE. 153 

Stript of thy happier attributes of birth, 
The virtue of thy race is left thee still, 
If, comprehending all the scope of bliss, 
Thy liberty be larger than thy will. 



fflGH AET. 

So, friends, you see my picture brought to end 
With labor manifold of eye and hand, 
And that whose slaves they are, the master-brain. 
Great Angelo's Last Judgment I've reversed. 
And Hell on Earth is what I have to show. 
The subject is more homelike than you think, 
The scenes we move in gave the atmosphere. 
The whole is painted from what 's next at hand. 

You see the emblems of the time and place 
Foreshadowed in the City's household Gods — 
An elm that offers hanging, to my mind, — 
Spires like to lightning-rods of heavenly grace, 
Whose services are merely possible ; 
That fire, too, has a fashion of its own, 
And might consume an unprotected soul, — 
With groupings of the granite piles that stand 
For Babel's pride, without her gift of tongues. 



HIGH ART. 155 

Most of your number claim some feature here, 
Some act or gesture, woven with ray toil. 
You, Madam, seize upon the hair and brow 
So golden-placid in this pardoning Saint — 
They 're yours indeed, but here the likeness ends. 
Your eyes, you see, were not the spirit sort, 
Your mouth, a pursed conventionality ; 
More than one weary morning's work it took 
^o help what was forgotten in your making. 
That Matron, so familiar to our ken. 
Who loves her scandal raw as English beef, 
And, so she gets her pound of shivering flesh. 
Is little careful how she comes by it ; 
You '11 know her, by her slab and jaunty air, 
Her spiteful feathers, and her glossy back ; 
But aught so worthless as her countenance 
Art does not keep, so that is turned elsewhere. 

You, addle-pate with diamonds in your gift ; — 
You, not of God, but Babbage, clever thing 
To calculate, and add, and multiply, — 
And you, poor Waghng, striking baldly now 
At follies you have supped on, in your time, 
I've shadowed with an artist's charity. 
But you, stage-villain of some tragedy 



156 HIGH ART. 

That shudders through the smoothness of your face ; 
Thank God, Sir, by the bending of your knees, 
I do not show you in my pillory 
For gentler fools to gape at, and contemn ! 

And this veiled figure that dishevelled flies, 

Or beats back scorn with scorn, or weeps at pity. 

It has the face no second-sight can show. 

What — it mislikes you ? I've allowed myself 
Some freedoms ? Yes — a painter's privilege ; 
To put on canvas what you would not show 
If you could help the same, being 'ware of it. 
I've made a Bandit of a bearded wretch 
By dashing courage in his vacant eyes. 
That persecuting Jew is horrible ? 
He worships weekly at a Christian shrine. 
I've clothed in scarlet one whose worldly dress 
Is a prim rainbow of proprieties, — 
I let the scarlet of her soul strike through 
The drab decorum, as another drew 
The fiery Corday, going to her death, 
Draped in the hue of her impetuous blood. 
I've suited Harpies claws to well-bred hands, 
And put the snake-wreath for the snaky tongue. 



HIGH ART. 157 

Well — but I want a picture, as you know, 
And your strong points came excellently in, — 
For men and women of the best repute 
Make cheats, thieves, cut-throats, with a little aid. 

So, you have helped me to a work of Art, 
And, without pains of yours, to men's remark — 
Oh ! take elsewhere your favor, if you will — 
But what you 've taught me, in your own despite, 
I keep for my own uses, and the world's. 
Go — sit to every artist save the Sun — 
For, hark ye, as a friend — it were not wise 
To tempt his rendering of your facial text. 

And, now I think of it, your wrath assists 
A project that has grown on me, of late — 
For, having quartered in your haunts so long 
That I have got your wickedness by heart, 
What choice is left me, but an hermitage. 
Where converse of the calm immortal souls 
Shall help your poison with its antidote. 
Till Art be purged of grief and bitterness. 
I'll build its walls of sturdy monoliths, 
(Faiths without dogmas — Mother-sciences.) 
Apocalyptic Hope shall ceil the roof 



158 HIGH ART. 

With visions that were with me from my birth,- 
ril teach the door a watchword of my own 
That shall forbid its turning — here I'll work, 
With earnest toil, the ransom of my years, — 
Till Death, stern friend that cannot be denied, 
Shall enter noiseless, to depart with me. 



PKELUDE. 

He could not close his weary eyes 
Because she chid him, ere she slept ; 
He left his bed at morning rise, 
And through the streets uneasy swept. 
Waiting till slumber's truce should cease. 
And she might give the sign of peace. 
Shall she be proud ? oh no — 
It is not she, but Love 
That moves the great heart so. 

She gave it, and he bent his head. 
The head that bears the massy curls. 
And pressed the Hps, so lustrous red, 
The full lips, set with stainless pearls. 
With fervour on the thin, weak hand, 
That holds nor prowess, wealth, nor land. 
Shall she be proud ? oh no — 
Not by her word, but Love's, 
The pulse-beats come and go. 



1 60 PRELUDE. 

And when I try, beneath this sun, 

All exploits that o'erleap the grave, 

I find by Will they were not done, 

Nor "Wealth, nor Wisdom chose nor gave. 

Some higher Potency begot 

The Virtue's self that knew it not. 

Shall we be proud ? oh no ? 

Not from ourselves, but Love, 

Immortal actions flow. 



ODE. 

Wherefore, great Love, to thee 

I bend the duteous knee. 
The homage of the heart devoutly paying ; 

Thou, greatest, first, and best, 

Lord of the human breast. 
None vainly slighteth thee in deed or saying. 

Not in the childish guise 

Where thy transcendent eyes 
O'erleapt the heathen heaven's soft surrounding , 

Nor in the wood-nymph's dress. 

With lusty gagliardesse 
Of Satyrs from the tangled thicket bounding. 



PRELUDE. 161 

But with the awful brow, 

The still, hushed presence thou, 
The eyes that darken not the world with weeping, 

The hand that never fails 

To match the golden scales 
With the heart wealth, left countless to thy keeping. 

Thou from the infant's birth 

To the last day of earth 
With tireless skill each fateful action fitting ; 

A genius at his side. 

Divine to rule and guide, 
Nor overcome at last, thro' fall and flitting ; 

Thou, at the classic feast 

By garlands unappeased. 
Responding not to fondest invocation 

Of youthful votaries, 

Till holy Socrates 
Uplift their hearts to thine eternal shining. 

Mute at the high command. 
The solemn voice and hand. 
Loud mirth and tipsy jollity sink under ; 



11 



162 PRELUDE. 

The dim eyes strain to see 
Thy far off sanctity, 
Then turn to other eyes, suffused with wonder. 

My paean too shall sound, 

And my glad feet rebound 
From this dark orb, our chequered fortunes rolling. 

Where my faint heart lay prone, 

Up to thy starry zone, 
As the bird flies, by Nature's sweet controlHng. 

But thou rebuk'st us too, 

For all our wild ado, 
The want, the waste, the weary fault and fretting ; 

How mad the turmoil seems. 

When, in our waking dreams, 
Thou sham'st it with the presence past forgetting. 

Be piteous to our sins, 

Where thought of thee begins. 
And on thy hallowed ground we tread unknowing ; 

Are ravished far away 

To unknown night and day. 
Scared with dim heights, and viewless torrents 
flowing. 



PRELUDE. 163 

A thousand phantoms claim 

Allegiance in thy name, 
And we, unhappy, take the lead they give us, 

While in thy sacred bounds, 

Illuminate with wounds, 
Slow smihng sweet, thou waitest to receive us. 

There, where no dust nor damp 

Quench thine unfailing lamp, 
Suffer, oh Infinite, that we behold thee ; 

And kiss thy feet, with tears 

Hoarded thro' painful years, 
And with the wealth of loosened locks engold thee. 

Like priceless ointment shed 

On some beloved head. 
Let the mute worship of our hearts come o'er thee. 

Till, ravished with thy sight, 

Transfigured in thy light. 
Our human baseness faint and die before thee. 



ADE. 

A truce, a truce, a gallant truce ! 
A hand flung up, and a shout of cheer ; 
The toihng hand that has sped and spun 
The labor of the year. 

Farewell, ye turbulent hosts of rhyme, 
Whose wrangling wi'ought such ill-content, 
Farewell, ye beggarly broken lines, 
A Falstaff regiment. 

The sour and sweet I could not taste 
Till ye had sat and drunk your fill ; 
The Hfe I bore was never mine. 
But yours to waste at will. 

Oh ! yon, where the sunset's heart is warm 
A fair bird singeth, sorrow-free ; 
I am his Sister belov'd, he says. 

And, wistful, he waits for me. 



adL 165 

No bird of Juno's nor of Jove's, 



'J 



Nor Pallas, blinking tbro' day-shut eyes ; 
But a mate-dove, loving so faithfully, 
That Love did make him wise. 

And we will sit as on burnished gold, 
The earth-ball rolling at our feet, 
And whisper of things which, had they been. 
Had been for song too sweet. 



By the Author of this Volume. 



PASSION-FLOWERS 

THIRD EDITION. 

I vol. i6mo. 75 cents. 



19 6 5 



!ii 






^^'% 




%,""\-^\^^"^% 






,^ 






Oc 



z ^f. 



" *& -V ' -i 



<--. ''^-^\a 






t^ v>^ 



-^^^: 



\ 



#^ 



x^~^ ""^-^ '/ 



C' t 






"^ 









,0^ .-" 



















^ o 












.^^ 



^ .x^^^-^ 










